Sunday, November 26, 2023

Solemnity of Our Lord Jesus Christ, King of the Universe

November is the month dedicated to the Poor Souls in Purgatory

December is the month dedicated to Advent and Christmas

Readings from the Rule of Saint Benedict for the Week: Ch 47 Announcing the Hours for the Work of God - Ch 51 Brothers on a Short Journey

He guides me in right paths.

ALL FOR WHOM LOVE OR DUTY BIDS ME PRAYER,
MY JESUS MERCY!

MARY, QUEEN OF ALL SAINTS,
SAINT MICHAEL THE ARCHANGEL,
PRAY FOR US.

So that God may be all in all.
(1 Cor 15:28)

Welcome to the Solemnity of Our Lord Jesus Christ, King of the Universe and entry into the Last Week in Ordinary Time. How worthy is the Lamb who was slain, to receive power and divinity, and wisdom and strength and honor. To Him belong glory and power for ever and ever. Amen. (Entrance Antiphon, Mass). 

Let us continue during these final days of November to pray for those who have died, for the poor souls in Purgatory, and especially for those who don't have anyone to pray for them. We pray too, for the repose of the soul of Ruth Burrows (Sister Rachel, OCD), the Quidenham Carmelite who died on November 10, 2023. Ruth summarized her insights in this way: "God offers Himself in total love to each one of us. Our part is to open our hearts to receive the gift." Thank you, Sister Rachel, for your service to God and the Church. Rest in peace.

Next Sunday is the First Sunday of Advent and the start of the new liturgical year. Is there a saint calling out to be your patron saint for the year? Has there been a nudge from one of the saints you've read about or heard from throughout the days of November? Just who is it that could help you respond to the universal call to holiness and reach out to those in need - the hungry, the thirsty, the naked, the imprisoned - for those in need of your attention and care at home, work, parish, or in your neighborhood. You don't have to go far to find someone in need of your love. Just who is it that will help you open your heart to receive the gift of God's love and then pass it along to others ...

Amen, I say to you, whatever you did for one of the least of the brothers or sisters of mine, 
you did for me.
(Matthew 25:40)

And now the time you've been waiting for. Let us rejoice and be glad as we hear from our voices for the week. With all the saints, we join our holy father Saint Benedict "ready to give up our own will, once and for all, and armed with the strong and noble weapons of obedience to do battle for the true King, Christ the Lord" (Rule of Saint Benedict, Prologue 3).

The saints in each generation, joined to those who have gone before and filled like them with light, become a golden chain, in which each saint is a separate link, united to the next by faith, works and love.
(Saint Simeon the New Theologian, 949-1022)

A person can wait for the Lord the more trustfully if his conscience is so at rest as to let him say: Every smallest possession of mine, Lord, is entirely yours.
(Guerric of Igny, 1070/80-1157)

Gratitude is the first sign of a thinking, rational creature.
(Blessed Solanus Casey, 1870-1957)

May we always welcome the word which you send us and give it flesh in our lives, that those who come after us may learn the message of your love from what we do and say.
(Blessed Arnold Jules Reche, 1838-1890)

Love knows no measure, so in love and for love we should just suffer and work.
(Blessed Ulrike Franziska Nisch, 1882-1913)

I wish to be a poor woman and I am happy with it, because it seems to me that this way I am loved even more by the Lord ... It is not riches but doing the will of God that makes the heart happy.
(Blessed Eurosia Fabris, 1866-1932)

Happiness can only be achieved by looking inward and learning to enjoy whatever life has, and this requires transforming greed into gratitude.
(Saint John Chrysostom, 347-407)

The secret of happiness is to live moment by moment and to thank God for what He is sending us every day in His goodness.
(Saint Gianna Beretta Molla, 1922-1962)

O my God, let me remember with gratitude and confess to Thee Thy mercies toward me.
(Saint Augustine of Hippo, 354-430)

In all created things discern the providence and wisdom of God, and in all things give Him thanks.
(Saint Teresa of Avila, 1515-1582)

SAINT LEONARD OF PORTO MAURIZIO,
SAINT FRANCESCO ANTONIO FASANI,
SAINT JOHN BERCHMANS,
SAINT FERGAL,
BLESSED BERNARD FRANCIS DE HOYOS,
BLESSEDS DENIS AND REDEMPTUS,
SAINT ANDREW, APOSTLE,
BLESSED CLEMENTINE ANUARITE,
SAINT ALEXANDER BRIANT,
ALL SAINTS OF THE SERAPHIC ORDER,
SAINT SATURNINUS,
SAINT CATHERINE LABOURE,
SAINT JAMES OF THE MARCHES,
SAINT FRANCESCO ANTONIO FASANI,
SAINT JAMES INTERCISCUS,
SAINT SECHNALL OF IRELAND,
SAINT LEONARD OF PORT MAURICE,
SAINT PETER OF ALEXANDRIA,
BLESSED SANTIAGO ALBERIONE,
SAINT RALPH SHERWIN,
SAINT EDMUND CAMPION,
SAINT ELIGIUS,
SAINT BIBIANA,
PRAY FOR US.

Today's photo: For years to come.

© Gertrude Feick 2023

Sunday, November 19, 2023

Thirty-Third Week in Ordinary Time

November is the month dedicated to the Poor Souls in Purgatory

The 33rd Sunday in Ordinary Time is World Day of the Poor

Readings from the Rule of Saint Benedict for the Week: Ch 41 The Times for Meals- Ch 46 Faults Committed in Other Matters

Blessed are those who fear the Lord.

MARY, HELP OF CHRISTIANS,
MARY, QUEEN OF ALL SAINTS,
SAINT MICHAEL THE ARCHANGEL,
PRAY FOR US.

FOR THE WORLDY-MINDED, WHO FAILED TO USE THEIR WEALTH AND TALENTS IN THE SERVICE OF GOD,
MY JESUS MERCY!

For all of you are children of the light and children of the day. We are not of the night or of darkness. Therefore, let us not sleep as the rest do, but let us stay alert and sober.
(1 Th 5:5-6)

Welcome to the Thirty-Third Week in Ordinary Time, still in the month of November dedicated to the Poor Souls in Purgatory. It is this week that we celebrate Thanksgiving Day. Give God the praise!. It is fitting and right, then, that we think about all the gifts and blessings Our loving God has given each one of us, individually and collectively. At the same time, we think about what we have, or have not done, with the gifts, or "talents", that God has bestowed upon us in abundance. There could be many reasons why we don't use the gifts God has given us. Perhaps we feel unworthy, or we do not trust God to give us the strength we need to carry out what is asked of us, or maybe we are afraid of the unknown. Or maybe we do not even know what our gifts are, and sadly, no one else has bothered to help us develop our gifts. And there could be plenty of reasons to wonder why another would be bothered by such a thing. There are not a few things, then, to keep in mind. First, remember how Saint Benedict begins Ch 40 of the Holy Rule, "The Proper Amount of Drink." Our holy father begins with words from Saint Paul and reminds us that "everyone has his own gift from God, one this and another that" (1 Cor 7:7/RB 40:1). That would be everyone, not just a select few. And Saint Paul tells us elsewhere that "God is faithful and will not let you be tried beyond your strength" (1 Cor 10:13). It seems to me then, that we should just go for it and give glory to God. If others are jealous, envious, in the comparing mode, or whatever, that is their problem, not yours. It's all for the glory of God and the good of the Body of Christ. Build up; don't tear down. And if you notice something good in another, for the sake of Our living and true God, tell her! We turn once again to Saint Benedict who turns to Saint Paul who declared: "By God's grace I am what I am (1 Cor 15:10), and again, "he who boasts should make his boast in the Lord" (2 Cor 10:17)/RB Prologue 31-32. And while we are at it, we might as well cry out with Saint Joan of Arc and declare, "I am not afraid; I was born to do this."

As we go forth this week, united in faith and prayer, we join Pope Francis and all those gathered in Saint Peter's Square for the Sunday Angelus, and pray, 

Lord, I trust in You; give me the strength to keep going; I trust in You, in the things You have given me; let me know how to carry them forward.

Inspired, we keep going, and listen to this week's voices, all from saints. The first shout helps us keep things in perspective as we respond to the universal call to holiness and remember that holiness is for everyone no matter your state of life.*

There is no harm to the saints if their faults are shown as well as their virtues.
(Saint Francis de Sales, 1567-1622)

You learn to speak, by speaking, to study by studying, to run by running, to work by working; and just so you learn to love God and man by loving. Begin as a mere apprentice and the very power of love will lead you on to become a master of the art.
(Saint Francis de Sales, 1567-1622)

We are not called upon to be successful, but to be faithful.
(Mother Saint Teresa of Calcutta, 1910-1997)

Cling inseparably to eternal treasures but things temporal we must use like passers-by, that as we are sojourners beginning to return to our own land, all the good things of this world which meet us may be as aids on the way, not snares to detain us.
(Pope Saint Leo the Great, d. 461)

Praise the Lord with the lyre, make melody to Him with the harp of ten strings! Sing to Him a new song ...
Let us sing a new song not with our lips but with our lives ... 
Everyone one of us tries to discover how to sing to God. You must sing to Him, but you must sing well. He does not want your voice to come harshly to His ears, so sing well, brothers! ...
See how He Himself provides you with a way of singing. Do not search for words, as if you could find a lyric which would give God pleasure. Sing to Him "with songs of joy." This is singing well to God, just singing with songs of joy ...
Your heart must rejoice beyond words, soaring into an immensity of gladness, unrestrained by syllabic bonds. Sing to Him with songs of joy.
(From a discourse on the psalms by Saint Augustine, bishop, in Office of Readings, November 22, Memorial of Cecilia, Virgin and Martyr)

Monks should diligently cultivate silence at all times, but especially at night.
(Rule of Saint Benedict, 42:1)

Let us not imprint on ourselves the image of a despot, but let Christ paint His image in us with His words: My peace I give you, my peace I leave with you. But the knowledge that peace is good is of no benefit to us if we do not practice it. The most valuable objects are usually the most fragile; costly things require the most careful handling. Particularly fragile is that which is lost by wanton talk and destroyed with the slightest injury of a brother. Men like nothing better than discussing and minding the business of others, passing superfluous comments at random and criticizing people behind their backs. So those who cannot say: The Lord has given me a discerning tongue, that I may with a word support him who is weary should keep silent, of if they do say anything it should promote peace.
(From an instruction by Saint Columban, abbot, in Office of Readings, November 23)

Creator God, you have endowed each one of us with unique talents and possibilities. Give us the strength to use these gifts to develop ourselves, to serve the community in which we live, and to give glory to you, the source of all giftedness. We ask this through Christ Our Lord.
Amen.**

SAINT RAFAEL GONZALEZ AND HIS COMPANIONS,
SAINT RAFAEL KALINOWSKI,
SAINT EDMUND,
SAINT CECILIA,
POPE SAINT CLEMENT I,
SAINT COLUMBANUS,
BLESSED MIGUEL AGUSTIN PRO,
SAINT ANDREW DUNG-LAC AND HIS COMPANIONS,
SAINT CATHERINE OF ALEXANDRIA,
PRAY FOR US.

*For a fun essay, see Donald Demarco, "The Eccentricities of Saints," in Catholic Exchange, November 8, 2023. 
**See Michael Casey, Balaam's Donkey: Random Ruminations For Every Day of the Year (Liturgical Press, 2019).

Today's photo: A contribution from a faithful reader and longtime friend of Redwoods, who just happens to take beautiful photos too. This one from her recent retreat with us. Who walk in His ways!

© Gertrude Feick 2023

Sunday, November 12, 2023

Thirty-Second Week in Ordinary Time

November is the month dedicated to the Poor Souls in Purgatory

Readings from the Rule of Saint Benedict for the Week: Ch 35 Kitchen Servers for the Week - Ch 40 The Proper Amount of Drink

My lips shall glorify you.

THOSE WHO ARE LEAST REMEMBERED,
MY JESUS HAVE MERCY.

SAINT MICHAEL THE ARCHANGEL,
PRAY FOR US.

Resplendent and unfading is wisdom, and she is readily perceived by those who love her, and found by those who seek her.
(Wisdom 6:12)

Welcome to the Thirty-Second Week in Ordinary Time as we continue to blaze through the glorious month of November dedicated to the Poor Souls in Purgatory. For all who have died, for the poor souls in Purgatory, for all those who don't have anyone to pray for them, and for all those who pray for us as we continue on our journey of faith and respond to the universal call to holiness. Give praise to God! And how fitting it is this week as we commemorate All the Saints of the Benedictine Family to heed the words of our holy father Benedict in the Prologue to the Holy Rule. After all, it is Jesus who tells us to Stay awake and be ready! For you do not know on what day your Lord will come. It behooves us to be ready. And if it's not Wisdom that you run into, run the other way! 

Let us get up then, at long last, for the Scriptures rouse us when they say: It is high time for us to arise from sleep. Let us open our eyes to the Light that comes from God, and our ears to the voice from heaven that every day calls out this charge: If you hear His voice today, do not harden your hearts, And again: You that have ears to hear, listen to what the Spirit says to the churches. And what does He say? Come and listen to me, sons; I will teach you the fear of the Lord. Run while you have the light of life, that the darkness of death may not overtake you. 
(Holy Rule of Saint Benedict, Prologue 8-13)

And for our voices for the week, we give praise as we hear first from my patron saint, commemorated November 16. A voice that turns out to be a nice little mantra for just about all situations, those pleasant and not so pleasant as we are bound to be presented with a little of both. ☺

In all that concerns me, Lord, Your adorable will be done.
(Saint Gertrude the Great of Helfta, 1256-1301)

Teach me the language you speak, O God, and make me understand those little signs, by which you give understanding hearts to know what is your will.
(William of St. Thierry, c. 1085-1148)

You are the tabernacle of God; you the temple of God. As the Apostle says: Holy is the temple of God which you are. A temple, because the Lord will reign forever in you. And yet a tabernacle, because God is on pilgrimage in you, God hungers in you, God thirsts in you.
(Aelred of Rievaulx, 1110-1167)

Humility is not a coward's virtue. Its beatitude is found through an abandonment in faith that touches the heroic.
(Bishop Eric Varden, ocso, Bishop of Trondheim, Norway) 

God will either shield you from suffering or will give you unfailing strength to bear it. Be at peace, and put aside all anxious thoughts and imaginations.
(Saint Francis de Sales, 1567-1622)

Everything may be taken from us, but God we shall find everywhere. Courage, Sisters, courage!
(Saint Julie Billiart, 1751-1816, in collaboration with a devout noblewoman, foundress of the Sisters of Notre Dame)

We must keep the flame of faith alive in our heart. This flame is lit with the oil of charity and prayer; charity performed through and for the love of God.
(Pope Benedict XVI, 1927-2022)

The greater my unworthiness, the more abundant His mercy.
(Saint Elizabeth Ann Seton, 1774-1821)

All for God, and all through Mary.
(Saint Rafael Arnaiz Baron, 1911-1938)

SAINT FRANCIS XAVIER CABRINI,
ALL SAINTS OF THE BENEDICTINE FAMILY,
SAINT MACHAR,
BLESSED MARIA TERESA SCRILLI,
SAINT DYFRIG OR DUBRIC OR DUBRICUS,
SAINT LAURENC O'TOOLE,
THE BEATIFIED MARTYRS OF THE CLIFTON DIOCESE,
THE READING MARTYRS,
SAINT JOSEPH PIGNATELLI,
ALL CARMELITE SAINTS,
SAINT ALBERT THE GREAT,
COMMEMORATION OF ALL CARMELITE SOULS,
SAINT MARGARET OF SCOTLAND,
SAINT GERTRUDE THE GREAT OF HELFTA,
SAINT JOSEPH MOSCASTI,
SAINT EDMUND OF ABINGDON,
OUR LADY OF THE GATE OF DAWN,
SAINT ELIZABETH OF HUNGARY,
SAINT HILDA,
SAINT HUGH OF LINCOLN,
SAINT DIONYSIUS OF ALEXANDRIA,
SAINTS PETER AND PAUL,
SAINT ROSE-PHILIPPINE DUCHESNE,
SAINT ROMAN OF ANTIOCH,
PRAY FOR US.

Today's photo: This one from a little walk my beloved sister and I took a few days ago. Don't forget to look down; don't forget to look up. Lifting up my hands, I will call upon Your name

© Gertrude Feick 2023

Sunday, November 5, 2023

Thirty-First Week in Ordinary Time

November is the month dedicated to the Poor Souls in Purgatory

Readings from the Rule of Saint Benedict for the Week: Ch 29 Readmission of Brothers Who Leave the Monastery - Ch 34 Distribution of Goods According to Need

O Lord, my heart is not proud.

Those who endure the greatest suffering, 
my Jesus, mercy!

MARY, QUEEN OF THE HUMBLE OF HEART,
SAINT MICHAEL THE ARCHANGEL,
PRAY FOR US.

Has not the one God created us?
(Malachi 2:10)

Whoever exalts himself will be humbled; but whoever humbles himself will be exalted.
(Mt 23:12)

Welcome to the Thirty-First Week in Ordinary Time and the month of November dedicated to the Poor Souls in Purgatory. Eternal rest grant unto them, O Lord, and let perpetual light shine upon them. May the souls of the faithfully departed through the mercy of God rest in peace. 

There is plenty for us to do this week. One is to humble ourselves and be busy about serving others, whether we are in the mood or not. I already passed along these words from Mother Saint Teresa of Calcutta (1910-1997); however, they are clear: "If you are truly humble, nothing will touch you, neither praise nor disgrace, because you know what you are." And that is what we are now, children of God made in the image and likeness of the one, living and true God. As children, we declare boldly: "By God's grace I am what I am (1 Cor 15:10), and again, "he who boasts should make his boast in the Lord" (2 Cor 10:17)/Rule of Saint Benedict, Prologue 31-32. 

And remember, the word of God is now at work in you who believe (see Th 2:13). I believe, help my unbelief. 

Now our voices for the week as we keep the faith and respond to the universal call to holiness. We begin with Saint Alphonsus Liguori (1696-1787), to help us as we pray for the dying and the already deceased, those who die alone and suffer alone in purgatory with no one on earth to pray for them. And this is one reason why I ask a dying person not to forget me and help me get to Heaven to join them. Give God the praise. 

The practice of recommending to God the souls in Purgatory, that He may mitigate the great pains which they suffer, and that He may bring them to His glory, is most pleasing to the Lord and most profitable to us. For those blessed souls are His eternal spouses, and most grateful are they to those who obtain their deliverance from prison, or even a mitigation of their torments. When, therefore, they arrive in Heaven, they will be sure to remember all who have prayed for them.

Follow the saints, because those who follow them will become saints.
(Pope Saint Clement I, d. 99)

In everything, do that which will make God loved the more.
(Blessed Frances d’Amboise, 1427-1485)

My fellow Christians, do we wish to celebrate joyfully the birth of this temple [the Lateran Basilica]? Then let us not destroy the living temples of God in ourselves by works of evil. I shall speak clearly, so that all can understand! Whenever we come to church, we must prepare our hearts to be as beautiful as we expect this church to be. Do you wish to find this basilica immaculately clean? Then do not soil your soul with the filth of sins. Do you wish this basilica to be full of light? God too wishes that your soul not be in darkness, but that the light of good works shine is us, so that He who dwells in the heavens will be glorified. Just as you enter this church building, so God wishes to enter your soul, for He promised: I shall live in them, and I shall walk the corridor of their hearts.
(From a sermon by Saint Caesarius of Arles, d. 542, in Office of Readings, November 9)

Invisible in His own nature [God] became visible in ours. Beyond our grasp, He chose to come within our grasp.
(Pope Saint Leo the Great, d. 461)

Here was a man [Saint Martin of Tours] words cannot describe. Death could not defeat him nor toil dismay him. He was quite without a preference of his own; he neither feared to die nor refused to live. With eyes and hands always raised to heaven he never withdrew his unconquered spirit from prayer ... he left this life a poor and lowly man and entered heaven rich in God's favor.
(From a letter by Sulpicius Severus, 363-425, in Office of Readings, November 11)

The human mind is prone to pride when not supported by power; how much more, then, does it exalt when it has that support.
(Pope Saint Gregoy the Great, d. 604)

The lively consideration of graces received makes us humble 
because knowledge of them excites gratitude.
(Saint Francis de Sales, 1567-1622, Introduction to the Devout Life, IV, 5)

Whoever needs less should thank God and not be distressed, but whoever needs more should feel humble because of his weakness, not self-important because of the kindness shown to him.
(The Rule of Saint Benedict, 34:2-4, Distribution of Goods According to Need)

Hold the cross high so I may see it through the flames!
(Saint Joan of Arc, 1412-1431)

BLESSED FRANCES D'AMBOISE,
SAINT JEAN-THEOPHANE VENARD,
SAINT ENGELBERT,
ALL THE SAINTS OF IRELAND,
ALL SAINTS OF AFRICA,
SAINT ILLTUDE OR ILLTYD,
SAINT NUNO ALVARES PEREIRA,
BLESSED JOSEPH GIRBES,
SAINT WILLIBRORD,
ALL SAINTS OF WALES,
BLESSED GEORGE NAPIER,
SAINT ELIZABETH OF THE TRINITY,
SAINT JOHN,
POPE SAINT LEO THE GREAT,
SAINT MARTIN OF TOURS,
PRAY FOR US.

Today's photo: I walk by this little beauty more than once a day. Thankfully, no creature great or small has managed to eat it. Give God the praise.

© Gertrude Feick 2023