Tag Archive | Christianity

Pray the Rosary for Peace

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“Continue to Pray the Rosary for Peace” ~ Our Lady of the Rosary to 3 Kids of Fatima.. Our Lady predicted Communism on October 13th, 1917.

June is the Month of Martyrs – Ss. Charles Lwanga and Companions – Ugandan Saints

These Catholic and Anglican Saints celebrate their Feast Days, today on June 3rd. Ss Charles Lwanga and Companions gave their life for Christ rather than sin against purity. Let us pray: “May Saint Charles Lwanga and his Companions – Pray for us, now and at the hour of our death. Amen.” St Charles Lwanga is No. 13 in the Photo below.

2a  - Photo of Martyrs

Here is their biography: http://www.buganda.com/martyrs.htm

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Memorial Day: May 27, 2013 – RIP

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RIP

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NEVER FORGET THEM

May the souls of all the deceased soldiers and veterans – and all the souls of the faithful departed, via the mercy of God, rest in peace. Amen. I also pray for my relatives who are in the Armed Services. May God hug them and keep them safe. I pray for God will bless the USA, with faith, hope and charity.

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Pope Francis’ Homily at the Canonization Mass for the Martyrs of Otranto Italy y Columbia’s 1st Saint Mother Laura Montoya y Saint María Guadalupe García Zavala

HOLY MASS AND CANONIZATIONS

HOMILY OF POPE FRANCIS

Saint Peter’s Square
Seventh Sunday of Easter, 12 May 2013

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Dear brothers and sisters!

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In this seventh Sunday of Easter we are gathered to celebrate with joy a feast of holiness. Thanks be to God who has made His glory – the glory of Love – to shine on the Martyrs of Otranto, on Mother Laura Montoya and María Guadalupe García Zavala. I greet all of you who have come to this celebration – from Italy, Colombia, Mexico, from other countries – and I thank you! Let us look on the new saints in the light of the Word of God proclaimed: a Word that invited us to be faithful to Christ, even unto martyrdom; a word that recalled to us the urgency and the beauty of bringing Christ and his Gospel to everyone; a word that spoke to us about the witness of charity, without which even martyrdom and mission lose their Christian savior.

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The Acts of the Apostles, when they speak of the Deacon, Stephen, the first martyr, insist on telling us that he was a man “full of the Holy Spirit (6:5, 7:55).” What does this mean? It means that he was full of the love of God, that his whole person, his whole life was animated by the Spirit of the risen Christ, so as to follow Jesus with total fidelity, even unto to the gift of self.

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Today the Church proposes for our veneration a host of martyrs, who were called together to the supreme witness to the Gospel in 1480. About eight hundred people, [who], having survived the siege and invasion of Otranto, were beheaded near that city. They refused to renounce their faith and died confessing the risen Christ. Where did they find the strength to remain faithful? Precisely in faith, which allows us to see beyond the limits of our human eyes, beyond the boundaries of earthly life, to contemplate “the heavens opened” – as St. Stephen said – and the living Christ at the right hand of the Father. Dear friends, let us conserve the faith [that] we have received and that is our true treasure, let us renew our fidelity to the Lord, even in the midst of obstacles and misunderstandings; God will never allow us to want [for] strength and serenity. As we venerate the martyrs of Otranto, let us ask God to sustain those many Christians who, in these times and in many parts of the world, right now, still suffer violence, and give them the courage and fidelity to respond to evil with good.

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The second idea can be drawn from the words of Jesus that we heard in the Gospel: “I pray for those who will believe in me through their word, that they may be one, as You, Father, are in me and I in thee, that they also may be in us. (Jn 17:20)” Saint Laura Montoya was an instrument of evangelization, first as teacher and then as the spiritual mother of the indigenous peoples, in whom she infused hope, welcoming them with the love [she] learned from God, and bringing them to him with pedagogical efficacy that respected, and was not opposed to, their own culture. In her work of evangelization, Mother Laura became, in the words of St. Paul, truly everything to everyone, (cf. 1 Cor 9:22). Even today her spiritual daughters live and bring the Gospel to the most remote and needy places, as a kind of vanguard of the Church.

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This first saint born on the beautiful Colombian soil, teaches us to be generous [together] with God, not to live the faith alone – as if we could live our faith in isolation – but to communicate, to radiate the joy of the Gospel by word and witness of life in every place we find ourselves. She teaches us to see the face of Jesus reflected in the other, to overcome indifference and individualism, welcoming everyone without prejudice or constraints, with love, giving the best of ourselves and above all, sharing with them the most valuable thing we have, which is not our works or our organizations, no: the most valuable thing we have is Christ and his Gospel.

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Finally, a third thought. In today’s Gospel, Jesus prays to the Father with these words: “I have made known thy name to them and will make it known: that the love wherewith thou hast loved me may be in them, and I in them. (Jn 17:26)” The martyrs’ faithfulness even unto death, the proclamation of the Gospel are rooted in the love of God that has been poured into our hearts through the Holy Spirit (cf. Rom 5:5), and in the witness we must bear to this love in our daily lives. St. Maria Guadalupe García Zavala knew this well. Giving up a comfortable life – how much damage does the comfortable life, life of comfort, do? The gentrification of the heart paralyzes us – and [she], giving up a comfortable life to follow the call of Jesus, taught people to love poverty, in order the more to love the poor and the sick. Mother Lupita knelt on the floor of the hospital before the sick, before the abandoned, to serve them with tenderness and compassion. This is what it means to touch the flesh of Christ. The poor, the abandoned, the sick, the marginalized are the flesh of Christ. And Mother Lupita touched the flesh of Christ and taught us this conduct: [to be] unabashed,[to be] unafraid, [to be] not loathe to touch the flesh of Christ. Mother Lupita understood what it means “to touch the flesh of Christ.” Today her spiritual daughters also seek to reflect the love of God in works of charity, without sparing sacrifices, and [while] facing with meekness, with apostolic constancy (hypomone), any obstacle.

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This new Mexican saint invites us to love as Jesus loved us, and this leads one not to retreat into oneself, into one’s own problems, into one’s own ideas, into one’s own interests in this little world that has done us so much damage, but to get up and go to meet those who need care, understanding and support, to bring the warm closeness of God’s love through gestures of delicacy and sincere affection and love.

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Fidelity to Christ and his Gospel, in order to proclaim it in word and deed, bearing witness to God’s love with our love, with our charity toward all: the saints proclaimed today offer shining examples and teachings of these. They also pose questions to our Christian life: how am I faithful to Christ? Let us take this question with us to consider during the day: how am I faithful to Christ? I am able to “show” my faith with respect, but also with courage? Am I attentive to others, do I recognize when someone is in need, do I see in everyone a brother and a sister to love? Let us ask that, by the intercession of the Blessed Virgin Mary and of the new saints, the Lord might fill our lives with the joy of His love. So be it.

 

Full text: Pope Francis’ Wednesday Audience address | Catholic World Report – Global Church news and views

Full text: Pope Francis’ Wednesday Audience address | Catholic World Report – Global Church news and views.

Should PRO-CHOICE POLITICIANS Receive Holy Communion? – Cardinal Arinze

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Your salvation did not come cheap. Jesus, The Lord of Life gave every ounce of His Blood (serosanguinius fluid), so that you would repent of your sins.

Pray this prayer, it will help you to repent:

“Oh blood and water, which gushed forth, from the Heart of Jesus as a Font of Mercy for us, I trust in You!” (Diary 84)

Go to confession, often. God will help you, to repent and love again. He loves you enough to send His Son, Jesus to prove it to you! Trust God. He won’t let you down.

GOD answers all prayers. God says “Yes,” “No,” or is silent and makes you trust Him more, by waiting. Don’t stop trusting Jesus – who is both God and Man. He loves you, and waits to hear your footsteps approach Him in the Tribunal of Confession. He loves for you to hear the words,

“Go in Peace your sins are forgiven.”

http://thedivinemercy.org/shrine/

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The Chaplet of Divine Mercy in Song (complete)

3-4 PM Hour of Divine Mercy. Come. Let us pray for one another, to Our Lord & Savior Jesus Christ

Look up Partial and Plenary Indulgences online.