Tag Archive | José

Beato José Luis Sánchez del Río – Ora Pro Nobis

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The life of 14-year-old Blessed José Luis Sánchez del Río of Mexico was given to Jesus in life and in death. He was a Cristeros. He died defending Religious Freedom in Mexico, in the later 1920′s. The Mexican President waged war on Catholics. There were 70,000 Mexican Catholics who died, defending their God given rights.

“On Tuesday at 6 o’clock in the morning they are going to shoot me
For believing in God eternal and in our great Lady of Guadalupe.

They found a picture of Jesus in my sombrero
So I got sentenced to death because I am a Cristero.

That’s why they are shooting me on Tuesday morning.
They can kill my useless body but never, never my soul.

I tell my torturers I want them to crucify me,
And then after crucifying me to use their rifles.

Goodbye Mountains of Jalisco, Michoacán and Guanajuato,
Where I fought the Government, who always ran away.

I knelt down and worshipped Jesus Christ.
They knew that there was no defense in this holy place.

I ‘m a farmer by heritage and a Jalisciense by birth.
I have no God but Christ, who gave me existence.

Killing me off isn’t going to stop people believing in the eternal God.
Many are in the fight, and others are being born.

That’s why they are going to shoot me on Tuesday morning.”

¡Viva Cristo Rey!

Mexico’s Cristero War’s Youngest Saint: Blessed Jose Luis Sanchez del Rio

Blessed Jose Luis Sanchez del Rio – Feast Day February 10th

Blessed Jose Luis Sanchez del Rio

Blessed Jose Luis Sanchez del Rio

“In order to go to heaven, we have to go to war …. Mother, will you deny me the chance to go to heaven, and so soon?”

Blessed Jose begged his mother to be able to fight in the Cristero‘s War, in Mexico. The Mexican Government waged war against the Catholic Church; from 1926 until 1929.

Blessed Jose Luis Sanchez del Rio, 15 years old, was killed on February 10, 1928, and was beatified by Pope Benedict XVI on November 20, 2005.

Blessed Jose’s feast day is February 10 – the day he died.

Biography of Blessed José Luis Sanchez Del Rio

José Luis Sanchez Del Rio was born in Sahuayo, Michoacan (Mexico), March 28 1913 to his parents Macario Sánchez, and María del Río. He visited the tomb of the Blessed Martyr Anacleto González Flores, he asked God to be able to die in defense of the Catholic faith. At fourteen, José Luis was martyred on February 10, 1928, during the religious persecution of Catholics, in Mexico. Jose Luis joined the Cristeros, a large Catholic group of men, women and teens who rose up and opposed the Anti-Catholic Laws and outright war on Catholics, by the Mexican President Plutarco Elías Calles.

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Article about Blessed Jose Luis Sanchez del Rio, on Wikipedia: José Sánchez del Río

“Consequently they cut the bottom of his feet and obliged him to walk around the town toward the cemetery. They also at times cut him with a machete until he was bleeding from several wounds. He cried and moaned with pain, but he did not give in. At times they stopped him and said, ‘If you shout, “Death to Christ the King” we will spare your life.’ José would only shout, ‘I will never give in. Viva Cristo Rey!’” When they reached the place of execution, his captors stabbed him numerous times with bayonets. The commander was so furious that he pulled out his pistol and shot José. Moments before his death, the boy drew a cross in the dirt and kissed it.

My Personal Prayer: “Dear Blessed Jose Luis Sanchez del Rio, Pray for the USA. We are facing what you faced, in your country, nearly a 100 years ago. Please pray for us to “Keep the Faith” even if we should have to die, for our Catholic Faith. Thank you. Amen.”

Photograph of the Incorrupt Body of Blessed Jose Luis Sanchez del Rio, 14 year old Martyr of the Catholic Faith, in Mexico in Feb. 1928. He died a heinous martyrdom, because he would not renounce his faith.

Click here to read more: Jose Luis Sanchez del Rio

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20120628-195929.jpg Dear Blessed Jose Luis Sanchez del Rio, pray for all of us to be as faithful and courageous for our Catholic Faith, as you were. Thanks. Amen.

The Holy Family Mirrors The Trinity – Archbishop José H. Gomez

Article by Archbishop José H. Gomez

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There was a time not too long ago, when American society encouraged family values and tried to strengthen the bonds of parents and children. Recent events in our state and nation remind us that’s not always the case anymore.

The family is God’s first beautiful gift to us. Because each one of us came into this world as the fruit of a mother and a father’s love. This married love is the heart of every true family. In this love, we see the heart of God who is Love.
The Spanish Missionaries who brought the faith to this country made paintings depicting the Holy Family of Jesus, Mary and Joseph being watched over by the Holy Trinity of the Father, Son and Holy Spirit.

The family on earth is meant to be a mirror of the Trinity, God’s divine “family” in heaven. God intends the family to be our first school of love, holiness and commitment. In the family, we learn who we are — and who God has created us to be. The family is vital in God’s plan for our personal lives. And the family is vital for our country.

America is not only a nation of individuals. Every individual comes from a family. The family is the original human community. Blessed John Paul II liked to call the family “the vital cell of society.” America needs strong families to nurture the values and virtues we need to live as a free and just people. But last week, the U.S. Supreme Court issued a ruling that will make it harder for American parents. The Court’s decision in Brown vs. Entertainment Merchants Association involved a 2005 California law that banned the sale of violent video games to minors. The Court said the law violated video game makers’ rights to freedom of speech.
That may be true. However as a pastor, I found myself more sympathetic to Justice Clarence Thomas’s dissenting opinion. Justice Thomas said that America’s founders would find it “absurd” to say that freedom of speech includes “a right to speak to minors … without going through the minors’ parents.”

He puts his finger on a big problem in our society today. Young people are often treated as a “target audience” for corporate and media messages that by-pass parents and undermine parental authority and moral values.
In his dissent, Justice Thomas offers a kind of “mini-history” lesson. He explains how important the family was in the thinking of America’s founders. He explains how our government has always respected the role of the family and worked to strengthen parents’ authority and rights.

Unfortunately, trends in our country — and in our state — seem to be moving in the opposite direction.
Right now, there are two bills in the California legislature that our state’s bishops believe represent a dangerous government intrusion into parents’ rights.

The first, Assembly Bill 499, would let children 12 and under decide for themselves to get vaccines or take other medications to prevent sexually transmitted diseases.

This would undermine parents’ duty to educate their children in moral values. It also violates parents’ rights to be responsible for their children’s physical and spiritual well being.

By passing this bill, in effect, government would be encouraging young people to engage in activities that are contrary to their parents’ moral values — and then to lie about it or keep it secret from their parents.
Children are not mature enough to think through the consequences of complicated medical decisions. This legislation would have children face these decisions without parental guidance — and under pressure from adults and corporate interests that have financial and other motives to promote these medications.

A second bill, Senate Bill 48, would require school textbooks to teach about the sexual orientations of figures in American history. This amounts to the government rewriting history books based on pressure-group politics. It is also another example of the government interfering with parents’ rights to be their children’s primary educators.

The California State Catholic Conference is urging that both of these bills be rejected.

As we pray for one another this week, let us commit ourselves to promoting the God-given rights of parents and families in California and in our country.
Let us work to become a people who no longer resort to abortion, birth control, in vitro fertilization and divorce. Let us build a future for our nation in which children grow up in families based on God’s law and the natural law.

And let us ask Mary, the Queen of the Family, to help us win the grace we need to stand up for parents and the family in our day.”

(By Archbishop José H. Gomez, re-posted from The Tidings – Weekly Newspaper of the Archdiocese of Los Angeles)

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Blessed José Luis Sánchez del Río

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Blessed José Luis Sánchez del Río (March 28, 1913 – February 10, 1928) was a young Mexican Cristero who was put to death by government officials because he refused to renounce his Catholic faith. He has been declared a martyr and was beatified by Pope Benedict XVI on November 20, 2005.

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Direct quotations from Wikipedia.

“The Cristero War (also known as the Cristiada) of 1926 to 1929 was an uprising and counter-revolution against the Marxist Mexican government in power at that time. The rebellion was set off by the persecution of Roman Catholics and specifically the strict enforcement of the anti-clerical provisions of the Mexican Constitution of 1917 and the further expansion of anti-clerical laws.

After a period of peaceful resistance, a number of skirmishes took place in 1926. The formal rebellions began on 2 January 1927,[6] with the rebels called Cristeros because they felt they were fighting for “Cristo Rey” (“Christ the King”). The rebellion ended by diplomatic means brokered by the then United States Ambassador to Mexico, Dwight Whitney Morrow.”

Cristero Wars

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