Showing posts with label Call. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Call. Show all posts

Sunday, April 30, 2023

Fourth Sunday of Easter

The Month of April Dedicated both to Devotion to the Eucharist and Devotion to the Holy Spirit

Good Shepherd Sunday

60th World Day of Prayer for Vocations, "Vocation: Grace and Mission"

In other years: Pope Saint Pius V (1504-1572); Saint Marie of the Incarnation (1599-1672); Our Lady, Mother of Africa

Readings of the Day

Rule of Saint Benedict: Ch 72 The Good Zeal of Monks 

Mass: Acts 2:14a, 36-41; Resp Ps 23; 1 Pt 2:20b-25; Jn 10:1-10

Only goodness and kindness follow me.

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

JESUS, TRUE SHEPHERD,
SPIRIT OF GRACE AND PRAYER,
HAVE MERCY ON US.

I came so that they may have life and have it more abundantly.
(Jn 10:10)

Welcome to Good Shepherd Sunday and Day of Prayer for Vocations. On this busy day, and during this busy week with more saints to invoke, we continue to pray for Pope Francis as he returns to Rome after his 41st Apostolic Journey outside of Italy, this time to Hungary. May Saint Elizabeth of Hungary intercede for him. We also mark the last day of April 2023 and launch into the beautiful month of May, the month of Mary, dedicated to devotion to the Blessed Mother. And if that is not enough, we wrap up the first read through of the Holy Rule of Saint Benedict for 2023 and spend today with the most beautiful Chapter 72 on the Good Zeal of Monks. Let them prefer nothing whatever to Christ, and may He bring us all together to everlasting life (Rule of Saint Benedict 72:11-12).

On Good Shepherd Sunday we have my favorite Psalm 23, a psalm that got me through many a lift from here to there in rural South Africa when I served in the United States Peace Corps. When someone would kindly give me a lift, and as soon as I got in the car, I would pray from Psalm 23 in Zulu. All will be well and all manner of things will be well. A mantra for the week can be, then, Ujehova ungumalusi wami angiyikuswela The Lord is my shepherd; I shall not want. Turn to the Lord, He is the gate - the only gate to enter. He will lead you and give you courage; only goodness and kindness will follow you, all the days of your life. United in faith and prayer, make friends with Psalm 23. And as I found it, it just may make you instant friends with strangers. Thank you, faithful readers, for being there. 

Here are some voices to assist you in your life of prayer and work this week. We begin with a prayer for Eastertide, the Regina Caeli Queen of Heaven.

Queen of heaven, rejoice, alleluia.
The Son whom you merited to bear, alleluia,
has risen as He said, alleluia.
Pray for us to God, alleluia.

Rejoice and be glad, O Virgin Mary,
alleluia!
For the Lord has truly risen, alleluia!

For the World Day of Prayer for vocations, and no matter our state of life, we are called to follow the Lord, to love Him with our whole heart and soul and strength, and to love our neighbor as ourselves. The Lord has called us out of darkness, into His wonderful light. He is our Light and our Life. Thanks be to God.

Our shared mission as Christians is to bear joyful witness wherever we find ourselves, through our actions and words, to the experience of being with Jesus and members of His community, which is the Church. That mission finds expression in works of material and spiritual mercy, in a welcoming and gentle way of life that reflects closeness, compassion and tenderness, in contrast to the culture of waste and indifference. By being a neighbor, like the Good Samaritan, we come to understand the heart of our Christian vocation: to imitate Jesus Christ, who came to serve, not be served.
(Message of His Holiness Pope Francis for the 2023 World Day of Prayer for Vocations) 

O Jesus, divine Shepherd of souls, you called the Apostles and made them fishers of men. Continue to draw to yourself ardent and generous souls among the young in order to make them your followers and ministers. Give them a share in your thirst for the redemption of all ... Open before them the horizons of the entire world ... By responding to your call, may they prolong your mission here on earth, build up your Mystical Body which is the Church, and be "salt of the earth" and "light of the world."
(Pope Saint Paul VI, First World Day of Vocations, April 11, 1964)

Monks and nuns are the beating heart of the Church's proclamation of the Gospel: their prayer is oxygen for all the members of the Body of Christ, the invisible source that sustains the mission ...
Monks and nuns, like Jesus, take on the world's problems, the difficulties, the illnesses, many things, and pray for others ... [cloistered religious] are always busy with work and prayer.
(Pope Francis, Wednesday General Audience, April 26, 2023)

In honor of Mary in this month of May, and also as we constantly turn to the saints for help and guidance, we hear from Saint Marcellin Champagnat (d. 1840), one of the founding members of the Society of Mary, or Marist Fathers, and the founder of the Marist Brothers.

A saint is a humble person, who constantly fights pride, who, far from wanting to dominate others, makes himself the least and the servant of all. Learn of me, says Jesus, because I am meek and humble of heart. All the saints attended the school of Jesus Christ; all of them learned humility from Him; all of them were models of this virtue.

And lastly, a few random voices, from here and there.

Consider it all joy, my brothers and sisters, when you encounter various trials, for you know that the testing of your faith produces perseverance.
(James 1:1)

If you are patient when you suffer for doing what is good, this is a grace before God. For to this you have been called, because Christ also suffered for you, leaving you an example that you should follow in His footsteps.
(1 Pt 2:20b-21)

Know this, dear brothers and sisters, everyone should be quick to hear, slow to speak, slow to wrath ... humbly welcome the word that has been planted in you ...
Be doers of the word and not hearers only, deluding yourselves ... the one who peers into the perfect law of freedom and perseveres, and is not a hearer who forgets but a doer who acts, such a one shall be blessed in what he does.
(James 1:19-25)

Every time you begin a good work, you must pray to Him most earnestly to bring it to perfection.
(Rule of Saint Benedict, Prologue 4)

Do not speak evil of one another.
(James 4:11)

If you desire true and eternal life, keep your tongue free from vicious talk and your lips from all deceit; turn away from evil and do good; let peace be your quest and aim.
(Rule of Saint Benedict, Prologue 17)

You will not see anyone who is really striving after his advancement who is not given to spiritual reading, and to him who neglects it, the fact will soon be observed in his progress.
(Saint Athanasius)

Listen carefully, my son, to the master's instructions, and attend to them with the ear of your heart.
(Rule of Saint Benedict, Prologue 1)

It is to be hoped that the life of everyone will be a life sustained by passionate love for the Lord Jesus; a life capable of responding to suffering and to thorns with forgiveness and the total gift of self, in order to spread everywhere the good odor of Christ.
(Pope Saint John Paul II, May 20, 2000, to pilgrims on the Centenary of the Canonization of Saint Rita of Cascia, d. 1457)

They should each try to be the first to show respect to the other, supporting with greatest patience one another's weaknesses of body or behavior, and earnestly competing in obedience to one another. No one is to pursue what he judges better for himself, but instead, what he judges better for someone else.
(Rule of Saint Benedict, 72:4-7)

POPE SAINT PIUS V,
SAINT MARIE OF THE INCARNATION,
OUR LADY, MOTHER OF AFRICA,
SAINT JOSEPH THE WORKER,
SAINT ATHANASIUS,
SAINTS PHILIP AND JAMES,
THE ENGLISH MARTYRS,
BLESSED MARIE-LEONIE PARADIS,
SAINT CONLETH,
THE BEATIFIED MARTYRS OF ENGLAND AND WALES,
SAINT JOSE MARIE RUBIO,
BLESSED ANGEL PRAT HOSTENCH AND COMPANIONS,
BLESSED EMILY BICCHIERI, OP,
SAINT ASAPH,
BLESSED EDMUND RICE,
SAINT RICHARD REYNOLDS,
SAINT ANGELUS,
SAINT FRANCOIS DE LAVAL,
SAINT RITA OF CASCIA,
PRAY FOR US.

Today's photo: He refreshes my soul.

© Gertrude Feick 2023

Thursday, August 18, 2022

Thursday of the Twentieth Week in Ordinary Time

Saints: Blessed Victoria Rasoamanarivo (1848-1894); Saint Alberto Hurtado Chruchaga (1901-1952)

Readings of the Day

Rule of Saint Benedict: Ch 63:1-9 Community Rank

Mass: Ezk 36:23-38; Resp Ps 51; Mt 22:1-15

A clean heart create for me, O God.

MARY, QUEEN OF PEACE,
HEART OF MARY, COMFORT OF THE AFFLICTED,
HAVE MERCY ON US.

I will give you a new heart and place a new spirit within you,
taking from your body your stony hearts and giving you natural hearts.
(Ezk 36:26)

We can always open our hearts a little more to receive the love and mercy of God. Our Lord is calling each one of us. When we hear His voice, may we not harden our hearts, but open wide and listen instead. We want to be ready. United in faith and prayer, we keep going. 

Many are invited, but few are chosen.
(Mt 22:1-16)

We end with a sweet little prayer from The Catholic Devotional: A Collection of Prayers and Inspiration for Every Catholic (Apostolic Publishing Company, 2022), p. 52, a gift I found at Saint Bernard Catholic Parish, Eureka, CA.

For Dependence on God

Lord, what we know not, teach us.
Lord, what we have not, give us.
Lord, what we are not, make us.
Amen.

BLESSED VICTORIA RASOAMANARIVO,
SAINT ALBERTO HURTADO CHRUCHAGA,
PRAY FOR US.

Today's photo: More beauty from Saint Bernard Catholic Parish, Eureka, CA, this time a delightful Fuschsia flower. 

© Gertrude Feick 2022

Monday, May 3, 2021

Feast of Saints Philip and James, Apostles

Year of Saint Joseph

Year of the Family "Amoris Laetitia The Joy of Love" 

Month of May Dedicated to Our Lady and a “Marathon” of Prayer to End the Pandemic 

Readings of the Day

RB: Prologue 8-13

Mass: 1 Cor 15:1-8; Resp Ps 19; Jn 14:6-14

Their message goes out through all the earth.

MARY, QUEEN OF APOSTLES,
PRAY FOR US.

The next day, Jesus decided to go to Galilee, and He found Philip. And Jesus said to him, "Follow me."
(Jn 1:43)

If the Lord wills it, we shall live to do this or that.
(James 4:15)

Happy Feast Day! We turn to the Apostles Philip and James for inspiration and encouragement as we continue to seek God and respond to Saint Benedict's call in today's passage from the Holy Rule.

Let us get up then, at long last, for the Scriptures rouse us when they say: It is high time 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 who 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.
(Rule of Saint Benedict, Prologue 8-13)

SAINTS PHILIP AND JAMES, APOSTLES
SAINT JOSEPH, SERVANT OF CHRIST,
MARY, MOTHER OF MERCY,
PRAY FOR US.

Today's photo: You have not seen this beauty from the Gorge. Compare it to the photo of Saturday, April 24th post. Our Lord is glorious on high.

© Gertrude Feick 2021