Tag Archive | Holy

PRAYER TO THE HOLY SPIRIT – By St Augustine of Hippo

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PRAYER TO THE HOLY SPIRIT

Saint Augustine of Hippo

Breathe in me, O Holy Spirit, that my thoughts may all be holy.

Act in me, O Holy Spirit, that my work, too, may be holy.

Draw my heart, O Holy Spirit, that I love but what is holy.

Strengthen me, O Holy Spirit, to defend all that is holy.

Guard me, then, O Holy Spirit, that I always may be holy.

Amen.

20130517-135842.jpg Painting of St Augustine of Hippo: author of this prayer

ACT OF CONSECRATION TO THE HOLY SPIRIT

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Novena to the Holy Spirit for the Seven Gifts

ACT OF CONSECRATION TO THE HOLY SPIRIT

On my knees before the great multitude of heavenly witnesses, I offer myself, soul and body to You, Eternal Spirit of God. I adore the brightness of Your purity, the unerring keenness of Your justice, and the might of Your love. You are the Strength and Light of my soul. In You I live and move and am. I desire never to grieve You by unfaithfulness to grace and I pray with all my heart to be kept from the smallest sin against You. Mercifully guard my every thought and grant that I may always watch for Your light, and listen to Your voice, and follow Your gracious inspirations. I cling to You and give myself to You and ask You, by Your compassion to watch over me in my weakness. Holding the pierced Feet of Jesus and looking at His Five Wounds, and trusting in His Precious Blood and adoring His opened Side and stricken Heart, I implore You, Adorable Spirit, Helper of my infirmity, to keep me in Your grace that I may never sin against You. Give me grace, O Holy Spirit, Spirit of the Father and the Son to say to You always and everywhere, “Speak Lord for Your servant heareth.” Amen.

Read more: http://www.ewtn.com/devotionals/pentecost/seven.htm#ixzz2TH7rIhWb

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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Veil of Saint Veronica – Holy Face of Jesus

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I have a replica of this version of the Veil of Saint Veronica. However, I do not understand why there are so many versions. I suppose Jesus did this kind gesture, for many people. So, I’m okay with that. He healed the King of Odessa of Leprosy with a cloth he wiped His Face with it.

And Christ left a photo of His Holy Face on the Veil of a woman named Veronica. When Veronica ran from the crowd, to wipe the face of Jesus with her veil, as He carried His Cross through the Way of the Cross, in Jerusalem, towards Calvary. That’s so nice of Him to reward her charity towards Him, with this image of His Face. It’s not a graven image. It’s Christ’s Holy Face – and Jesus is both God and Man.

Holy Lance of Saint Longinus

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History of the Holy Lance that Pierced Christ’s Sacred Heart, by a Roman Centurion named Saint Longinus. Saint Longinus was sprayed with Jesus Blood and Water and converted immediately and he was healed of blindness in one of his eyes, by Christ’s Blood/Water.

Years later Saint Longinus died a Martyr’s Death for Christ and the Catholic Faith.

Here is an article on it from Wikipedia: Holy Lance

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Holy Thursday Mandatum – Regarding Foot Washing

General Instructions of the Roman Missal

Holy Thursday Mandatum

My parish liturgy committee has decided to allow both men and women to take part in the washing of the feet at the liturgy on Holy Thursday. I have always heard that only men may have their feet washed. Which does the Church allow?

The rubric for Holy Thursday, under the title THE WASHING OF FEET, reads:

“After the Homily, where a pastoral reason suggests it, the Washing of Feet follows. The men who have been chosen (viri selecti) are led by the ministers to seats prepared in a suitable place. Then the priest (removing his chasuble if necessary) goes to each one, and, with the help of the ministers, pours water over each one’s feet and then dries them.”

Regarding the phrase viri selecti, the Chairman of the then-Committee on the Liturgy, after a review of the matter by the committee, authorized the following response which appeared in the Newsletter of February 1987:

Question: What is the significance of the Holy Thursday foot washing rite?

Response:

The Lord Jesus washed the feet of his disciples at the Last Supper as a sign of the new commandment that Christians should love one another: “Such as my love has been for you, so must your love be for each other. This is how all will know you for my disciples: by your love for one another” (see John 13, 34-35). For centuries the Church has imitated the Lord through the ritual enactment of the new commandment of Jesus Christ in the washing of feet on Holy Thursday.

Although the practice had fallen into disuse for a long time in parish celebrations, it was restored in 1955 by Pope Pius XII as a part of the general reform of Holy Week. At that time the traditional significance of the rite of foot washing was stated by the Sacred Congregation of Rites in the following words: “Where the washing of feet, to show the Lord’s commandment about fraternal charity, is performed in a Church according to the rubrics of the restored Ordo of Holy Week, the faithful should be instructed on the profound meaning of this sacred rite and should be taught that it is only proper that they should abound in works of Christian charity on this day.”

The principal and traditional meaning of the Holy Thursday mandatum, as underscored by the decree of the Congregation, is the biblical injunction of Christian charity: Christ’s disciples are to love one another. For this reason, the priest who presides at the Holy Thursday liturgy portrays the biblical scene of the gospel by washing the feet of some of the faithful.

Because the gospel of the mandatum read on Holy Thursday also depicts Jesus as the “Teacher and Lord” who humbly serves his disciples by performing this extraordinary gesture which goes beyond the laws of hospitality, the element of humble service has accentuated the celebration of the foot washing rite in the United States over the last decade or more. In this regard, it has become customary in many places to invite both men and women to be participants in this rite in recognition of the service that should be given by all the faithful to the Church and to the world. Thus, in the United States, a variation in the rite developed in which not only charity is signified but also humble service.

While this variation may differ from the rubric of the Sacramentary which mentions only men (“viri selecti”), it may nevertheless be said that the intention to emphasize service along with charity in the celebration of the rite is an understandable way of accentuating the evangelical command of the Lord, “who came to serve and not to be served,” that all members of the Church must serve one another in love.

The liturgy is always an act of ecclesial unity and Christian charity, of which the Holy Thursday foot washing rite is an eminent sign. All should obey the Lord’s new commandment to love one another with an abundance of love, especially at this most sacred time of the liturgical year when the Lord’s passion, death, and resurrection are remembered and celebrated in the powerful rites of the Triduum.

Note:

Sacred Congregation of Rites, Instruction on the Correct Use of the Restored Ordo of Holy Week, November 16, 1955 (Washington, DC: National Catholic Welfare Conference Publications Office, 1955), page 6.

In biblical times it was prescribed that the host of a banquet was to provide water (and a basin) so that his guests could wash their hands before sitting down to table. Although a host might also provide water for travelers to wash their own feet before entering the house, the host himself would not wash the feet of his guests. According to the Talmud the washing of feet was forbidden to any Jew except those in slavery.

In the controversies between Hillel and Shammai (cf. Shabbat 14a-b) Shammai ruled that guests were to wash their hands to correct “tumat yadayim” or “impurity of hands” (cf. Ex 30, 17 and Lv 15, 11). Priests were always to wash their hands before eating consecrated meals. The Pharisees held that all meals were in a certain sense “consecrated” because of table fellowship.

Jesus’ action of washing the feet of his disciples was unusual for his gesture went beyond the required laws of hospitality (washing of hands) to what was, in appearance, a menial task. The Lord’s action was probably unrelated to matters of ritual purity according to the Law.

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