Friday, May 4, 2012

Feast of the Shroud of Turin (May 4th)


The Feast of the Shroud of Turin is a day the Church has set aside for us to contemplate the image of the Crucified One and to remember the great sacrifice He made for us. Whether or not you believe the image is authentic is irrelevant. It serves as a reminder of the very real God-man Jesus Christ Who, as priest and sacrifice, gave of Himself so that others might live. He prefigured that concept when He said:
My commandment is this: love one another, just as I love you. The greatest love you can have for your friends is to give your life for them. And you are My friends if you do what I command you. (John 15:12-14 - GNV)
His Passion and is our Eternal Life. So great is our sin and so great is His love for us. Like a shepherd who leaves his 99 sheep in order to look for the single lost one, Jesus never forgets us. All we need do is to remember Him. (Mat 18:12 -13- GNV)

Thursday, May 3, 2012

St Joseph the Worker (May 1)

On May 1st, a contingency of Franciscans from the Holy Family community attended Mass at the Catholic Worker on 36 East 1st Street in Manhattan's East Village. This was the prayer and hospitality center that Dorothy Day founded. Their community was founded on St Joseph the Worker's feast day and so celebrate that feast day with a huge meal in which everyone is invited.

Saturday, April 28, 2012

Bl. Luchesio & Buonadonna (April 28)


Luchesio and his wife Buonadonna wanted to follow St. Francis as a married couple. Thus they set in motion the Secular Franciscan Order. Luchesio and Buonadonna lived in Poggibonzi where he was a greedy merchant. Meeting Francis—probably in 1213—changed his life. He began to perform many works of charity. At first Buonadonna was not as enthusiastic about giving so much away as Luchesio was. One day after complaining that he was giving everything to strangers, Buonadonna answered the door only to find someone else needing help. Luchesio asked her to give the poor man some bread. She frowned but went to the pantry anyway. There she discovered more bread than had been there the last time she looked. She soon became as zealous for a poor and simple life as Luchesio was. They sold the business, farmed enough land to provide for their needs and distributed the rest to the poor. In the 13th century some couples, by mutual consent and with the Church’s permission, separated so that the husband could join a monastery (or a group such as Francis began) and his wife could go to a cloister. Conrad of Piacenza and his wife did just that. This choice existed for childless couples or for those whose children had already grown up. Luchesio and Buonadonna wanted another alternative, a way of sharing in religious life, but outside the cloister. To meet this desire, Francis set up the Secular Franciscan Order. Francis wrote a simple Rule for the Third Order (Secular Franciscans) at first; Pope Honorius III approved a more formally worded Rule in 1221. The charity of Luchesio drew the poor to him, and, like many other saints, he and Buonadonna seemed never to lack the resources to help these people. One day Luchesio was carrying a crippled man he had found on the road. A frivolous young man came up and asked, "What poor devil is that you are carrying there on your back?" "I am carrying my Lord Jesus Christ," responded Luchesio. The young man immediately begged Luchesio’s pardon. Luchesio and Buonadonna both died on April 28, 1260. He was beatified in 1273. Local tradition referred to Buonadonna as "blessed" though the title was not given officially. Taken from Saint of the Day

Thursday, December 8, 2011

Happy Immaculate Conception Feast Day!!!


The Reason for the Season was the result of a young woman's choice to obey God and receive His grace. Today is the day we celebrate Mary's Immaculate Conception. When she was conceived in St. Anne's womb, she was, by the grace of God, created without sin. Let us celebrate the day remembering that Mary prefigures our own eternal glory in Heaven at the end of time.

Sunday, October 2, 2011

Blessing of the Animals


Today, before our parish's new St Francis of Assisi statue, Fr Caspar Furnari, our community's spiritual director, gathered together about a hundred dogs, cats, parrots, cockatoos, parakeets, a boa constrictor and one very confused turtle. All of our companion friends, whether furred, feathered or scaled joined us. And, as predicted, the squawking, growling, hissing, barking and unruly sniffing stopped immediately as soon as Fr Furnari intoned the blessing. All of the animals present tacitly gave their consent with

their silence.

Feast of the Guardian Angels (October 2)


Perhaps no aspect of Catholic piety is as comforting to parents as the belief that an angel protects their little ones from dangers real and imagined. Yet guardian angels are not just for children. Their role is to represent individuals before God, to watch over them always, to aid their prayer and to present their souls to God at death.

The concept of an angel assigned to guide and nurture each human being is a development of Catholic doctrine and piety based on Scripture but not directly drawn from it. Jesus' words in Matthew 18:10 best support the belief: "See that you do not despise one of these little ones, for I say to you that their angels in heaven always look upon the face of my heavenly Father."

Devotion to the angels began to develop with the birth of the monastic tradition. St. Benedict (July 11) gave it impetus and Bernard of Clairvaux (August 20), the great 12th-century reformer, was such an eloquent spokesman for the guardian angels that angelic devotion assumed its current form in his day.

A feast in honor of the guardian angels was first observed in the 16th century. In 1615, Pope Paul V added it to the Roman calendar.

Devotion to the angels is, at base, an expression of faith in God's enduring love and providential care extended to each person day in and day out until life's end.

"May the angels lead you into paradise;
may the martyrs come to welcome you
and take you to the holy city,
the new and eternal Jerusalem."
- Rite for Christian Burial

(This entry appears in the print edition of Saint of the Day.)

Saturday, October 1, 2011

Thérèse of Lisieux (October 1)


"I prefer the monotony of obscure sacrifice to all ecstasies. To pick up a pin for love can convert a soul." These are the words of Theresa of the Child Jesus, a Carmelite nun called the "Little Flower," who lived a cloistered life of obscurity in the convent of Lisieux, France. [In French-speaking areas, she is known as Thérèse of Lisieux.] And her preference for hidden sacrifice did indeed convert souls. Few saints of God are more popular than this young nun. Her autobiography, The Story of a Soul, is read and loved throughout the world. Thérèse Martin entered the convent at the age of 15 and died in 1897 at the age of 24.

Life in a Carmelite convent is indeed uneventful and consists mainly of prayer and hard domestic work. But Thérèse possessed that holy insight that redeems the time, however dull that time may be. She saw in quiet suffering redemptive suffering, suffering that was indeed her apostolate. Thérèse said she came to the Carmel convent "to save souls and pray for priests." And shortly before she died, she wrote: "I want to spend my heaven doing good on earth."

[On October 19, 1997, Pope John Paul II proclaimed her a Doctor of the Church, the third woman to be so recognized in light of her holiness and the influence of her teaching on spirituality in the Church.]

Thérèse has much to teach our age of the image, the appearance, the "sell." We have become a dangerously self-conscious people, painfully aware of the need to be fulfilled, yet knowing we are not. Thérèse, like so many saints, sought to serve others, to do something outside herself, to forget herself in quiet acts of love. She is one of the great examples of the gospel paradox that we gain our life by losing it, and that the seed that falls to the ground must die in order to live (see John 12).

Preoccupation with self separates modern men and women from God, from their fellow human beings and ultimately from themselves. We must relearn to forget ourselves, to contemplate a God who draws us out of ourselves and to serve others as the ultimate expression of selfhood. These are the insights of St. Thérèse of Lisieux, and they are more valid today than ever.

All her life St. Thérèse suffered from illness. As a young girl she underwent a three-month malady characterized by violent crises, extended delirium and prolonged fainting spells. Afterwards she was ever frail and yet she worked hard in the laundry and refectory of the convent. Psychologically, she endured prolonged periods of darkness when the light of faith seemed all but extinguished. The last year of her life she slowly wasted away from tuberculosis. And yet shortly before her death on September 30 she murmured, "I would not suffer less."

Truly she was a valiant woman who did not whimper about her illnesses and anxieties. Here was a person who saw the power of love, that divine alchemy which can change everything, including weakness and illness, into service and redemptive power for others. Is it any wonder that she is patroness of the missions? Who else but those who embrace suffering with their love really convert the world?


(This entry appears in the print edition of Saint of the Day.)