Showing posts with label prayers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label prayers. Show all posts

Thursday, October 19, 2023

A GOOD PRAYER EVEN IF YOU ARE NOT A KNOTT



FEAST OF OUR LADY UNDOER OF KNOTS
September 28

There are dozens of devotions to Mary, but one that has grown in popularity among the Catholic faithful in recent years has an interesting and unusual title: Mary, Undoer of Knots.

The devotion is centered on an image of Our Lady untying a series of knots in a long wedding ribbon. The devotion originated with a troubled marriage on the brink of divorce that was restored to health through Our Lady’s intercession. This event was afterwards memorialized in a painting of the Blessed Mother serenely untying the knotted wedding ribbon which represented the couple’s marital disharmony.

This devotion has become famous around the world because it is a favorite of the Holy Father, Pope Francis. It has now taken root among the faithful as an efficacious means of turning to Mary’s intercession for life’s most difficult problems. We give her our “knots” so that she can unravel them.

God’s providence never leaves us without a remedy; in His loving mercy, He always gives us what we need when we need it. He sees the bad state of our souls, the poor quality of our relationships, and the harmful condition of our societies—and this is not how He wants us to live. Christ died to set men free from sin, so that we could be properly ordered, so that we could be in right relationship with Him and with one another, living in peace and justice. When we go astray, individually or collectively, He always points to a path that will lead us back to Him. The way that He leads us back to Himself is the same way that He came to us: through His Mother.

Christ is so good that He not only wants us to return to Him, He also wants to heal the woundedness we incurred while living outside His will. He knows that we have reaped a tangled mess on account of our own sins and the sins of others. Who better to set things in order than His good and wise Mother? Just as a child goes to its mother with a hopelessly-tangled mess of knots, so too we go to Our Lady.

Mary Undoer of Knots is the devotion that reminds us that we are at war in the battle for our souls and our families. She will take our knots—which are made up of everything that is not the will of God for our lives—and unravel them one by one.









Tuesday, August 1, 2023

TWO COUNTRY PARISHES GET THEIR OWN HYMN AND PRAYER

 

As many of my readers know, I have recently finished a major project down in Meade County at my home twined-parishes of St. Theresa of Avila in Rhodelia (1818) and St. Mary Magdalen of Pazzi in Payneville (1872) turning the old now-closed St. Theresa School and Rectory into a new St. Theresa Family Life Center and Guest House to serve both parishes and the surrounding communities. 

With those renovations now completed, I turned my attention toward producing a new shared hymn and writing a new shared prayer that will help teach and re-enforce the details of our own histories in the minds of our parishioners, as well as inspire them going forward.  

Having sung the new hymn and said the new prayer in both parishes last Sunday, today I want to share that new hymn and that new prayer with my blog followers.  The lyrics of this new hymn can be used with at least four traditional hymn tunes. The version below uses the Ode to Joy hymn tune. Hymn tunes Nettleton, Beach Spring and Beecher can also be used.  

The "Augustus Tolton" and "Martha Jane" mentioned in the second verse are part of St. Theresa's sad mid-and-late 1800s slave-owning history. "Martha Jane" was born, baptized and raised a slave at St. Theresa's until she was 17 years old. Martha Jane was then taken to Missouri by her "owner" (Ann Manning) and her new husband (Stephen Elliot) after their marriage in Meade County. While in Missouri, young Martha Jane had at least three children. After Martha Jane escaped across the Mississippi River with her three children to the free state of Illinois, one of her children named "Augustus" went on to become our country's first recognized black Catholic priest. Father Augustus Tolton, having already completed the first two steps toward canonization, is on his way to soon being declared a saint. Just to think his Catholic faith was passed on to him from my home parish through his mother, Martha Jane! 


WITH US THEN AND WITH US STILL
A Prayer for the Spiritual Health of St. Theresa’s and St. Mary’s

Loving God, alive in our PAST, fill us with gratitude for those in our history who founded our parishes, built our churches and schooled our young. Prevent us from ever taking for granted the faith, courage and sacrifices they made to pass on to us the ancient faith that was passed on to them.   

Loving God, alive in our PRESENT, inspired by the drive of our early missionaries, show us today how to seek out and welcome back those who have drifted away from our parish communities and those who have been hurt by some of our leaders or some of our members. Inspire us today to strengthen our families by mentoring our young, encouraging our singles, honoring our elders, comforting our sick, heartening our lonely and accepting God’s mercy so that we can become vibrant faith communities to which new members are attracted simply because our faith is so zealously lived and willingly shared.

Loving God, alive in our FUTURE, teach us, in an unsettled world, how to build stable and welcoming parishes where our spirits are lifted and our souls find rest. Bless our renewed efforts to celebrate our sacred histories. May we pass those histories forward to yet another generation so that they too, inspired by the determination, inspiration and vision of the past, may again take the gospel to a troubled world. We ask this in faith through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen


St. Theresa Church was founded by Fr. Robert Abner Abell in 1818
Fr. Augustus Tolton’s mother, Martha Jane Chisley, was born in Mooleyville in 1827
The Sisters of Charity of Nazareth arrived at St. Theresa in 1870
St. Mary Magdalen of Pazzi Church was founded by St. Theresa's pastor, Fr. Jule Pierre Raoux, in 1872






Tuesday, July 11, 2023

FAITH HEALING


GIVEN AT THE LITTLE SISTERS OF THE POOR
July 10, 2023

The woman with the hemorrhage said to herself, "If I can only touch his tassel, I will be cured." Jesus turned around, saw her and said, ""Courage, daughter! Your faith has saved you."" And from that hour the woman was cured.
Matthew 9:18-26

When you get old like I am, you realize that you have a few books on your shelf that were the source of breakthroughs in understanding. Such is the case with a book by Father Louis Evely. With it, I had a great breakthrough in my understanding of “faith healing.”

Father Evely makes the case that the phenomenon known as a “faith healing” is simply the manifestation of the natural world not yet understood. A “miracle,” he says, does not happen from the outside in but from the inside out. We see that in today’s reading. Jesus did not tell the woman with the hemorrhage who was cured, “My power has cured you.” Instead, he said, “Your faith has cured you.”

In fact, Mark (6:5) reports that “Jesus could work no miracle there because of people’s lack of faith.” It was not touching the holy tassel outside of her that cured the woman in the Gospel that day; it was the faith inside of the woman who touched his tassel that triggered her cure!

What about the miracles that have been recorded at places like Lourdes and Fatima? Well, there have been miracles there and at every shrine of every religion and most of these have been miracles of healing.

Father Evely notes that the sole characteristic of a miraculous cure is the “abnormal acceleration of the natural healing process.” That which cannot be healed by a natural process is not susceptible to a miraculous cure. There are no reported cases of an amputated leg or arm, for example, being regrown miraculously — not even a finger. However, it seems that an “abnormal acceleration of the natural processes of healing” can be triggered by faith.

It’s not the sacred stone, the saint’s relic, the water from a mysterious water source or even the tassel of Jesus’ cloak that causes the healing, but the intensity of faith that is released within those who believe that triggers their extraordinarily rapid healing processes. That’s why Jesus said to the tassel-touching woman with a hemorrhage, “It is your faith that saved you.”

I believe in the power of faith to work miracles. In almost every assignment I have ever had, I have had to override the negative advice I was given by my predecessors. I was advised not to get my hopes up because “nothing could be done because this or that situation was hopeless.” By choosing to believe in the amazing possibilities of faith, not fairy godmothers, I have been able to witness amazing results in all those assignments.

Even doctors will tell you that some patients have mysteriously gotten well when they are able to believe that getting well was possible, while they have mysteriously lost patients who gave up believing in their treatment programs. Even Henry Ford said, “Those who believe they can and those who think they can’t, are both right.”

  

Tuesday, July 4, 2023

"GOD HELP US!"

 


A Prayer for America's Future

Loving God, forgive us for wanting our own way and making our own paths—often the ones paved with least resistance. Forgive us for fence-walking, or for ignoring completely the truths that can so easily set us free. Deliver us from mindless quarrels and destinations that lead us nowhere, but away from You. Free us from divisiveness, and melt our hardened hearts to love, not hate, and to heal, not debate. We ask this in faith. Amen!

Tuesday, June 21, 2022

WHY DO I DO WHAT I DO?


In my retirement, when I think of all the projects I have worked on, I often ask myself "Why do you do what you do?" I have no children. I am retired. I don't need all the hassle and bother. The simple answer is one of two things. Either I am (a)  just a pathetic obsessive-compulsive personality that is driven to accomplish things or (b) I am trying to leave a legacy for the generation that follows me so that they can share in some of the things that brought me such richness of life. As I ponder these things, the following words from the Book of Deuteronomy (4:9) stand out for me.

Take care and be earnestly on your guard not to forget the things
which your own eyes have seen, nor let them slip from your memory as long as you live, but teach them to your children and to your children's children.


This passage from the Second book of Maccabees (6:28) also comes to mind when I think about leaving a legacy for those who follow me. People like me are hopefully "prophets of a future not our own." 

I will prove myself worthy of my old age, and I will leave to the young a noble example of how to die willingly and nobly for the revered and holy laws.
 

The late Bishop Kenneth Untener was a significant presence in the U.S. Church. This late Bishop of Saginaw, Michigan, wrote the following prayer in 1979, following the murder of Archbishop Oscar Romero, who was shot while celebrating Mass for his prophetic stand for the rights of the poor and powerless in El Salvador


“Prophets of a Future Not Our Own”

It helps, now and then, to step back and take a long view.

The kingdom is not only beyond our efforts; it is beyond our vision.

We accomplish in our lifetime only a tiny fraction of the magnificent enterprise that is God’s work.

Nothing we do is complete, which is another way of saying that the kingdom always lies beyond us.

No statement says all that could be said.

No prayer fully expresses our faith.

No confession brings perfection.

No pastoral visit brings wholeness.

No program accomplishes the Church’s mission.

No set of goals and objectives includes everything.



This is what we are about:

We plant seeds that one day will grow.

We water the seeds already planted, knowing that they hold future promise.

We lay foundations that will need further development.

We provide yeast that produces effects beyond our capabilities.

We cannot do everything and there is a sense of liberation in realizing that.

This enables us to do something, and to do it very well.

It may be incomplete, but it is a beginning, a step along the way, an opportunity for God’s grace to enter and to do the rest.

We may never see the end results, but that is the difference between the master builder and the worker.

We are workers, not master builders, ministers, not messiahs.

We are prophets of a future not our own.







Thursday, March 3, 2022

THAT IRISH "CAT WITH THE NINE LIVES" IS BACK IN THE ISLANDS!


Fergal is back! Fergal is back! Fergal is back! 


I knew when I asked all of my readers to pray for my Irish friend and fellow volunteer in the islands, that it might work! Well, it did! He is back in the islands after several health scares over the last year and a half when he was back home in Ireland. What can I say? He's a tough old bird! 
He arrived back in Saint Vincent just the other day. I live-chatted with him on SKYPE. 
I took a picture of the computer screen to prove that this "cat with nine lives" is still with us! He is back until fall at his old desk in the Diocese of Kingstown Pastoral Centre!


After a few months down in the islands, he plans to come back through Kentucky on his way home to Ireland! I will let you know when that is - probably late August or early September. He has many Kentucky friends who will be wanting to see him, enjoy a few laughs and share a few "pints." 
 
"Rumors of my demise have been greatly exaggerated!"

Thursday, November 18, 2021

Friday, February 19, 2021

ONE HISTORY OF MEATLESS FRIDAYS

    Why Isn’t Fish Considered Meat During Lent?

               The following information is being passed on to you as part of my new ongoing series.                    "Father Ron's Periodic Suspicious Spiritual Advice" 

According to Saint Thomas Aquinas, the meat/fish divide boiled down to sex, simplicity and farts.


For six Fridays each spring, Catholics observing Lent skip sirloin in favor of fish sticks and swap Big Macs for Filet-O-Fish. Why?

Legend has it that centuries ago a medieval pope with connections to Europe's fishing business banned red meat on Fridays to give his buddies' industry a boost. But that story isn't true. Sunday school teachers have a more theological answer: Jesus fasted for 40 days and died on a Friday. Catholics honor both occasions by making a small sacrifice: avoiding animal flesh one day out of the week. That explanation is dandy for a homily, but it doesn't explain why only red meat and poultry are targeted and seafood is fine.

For centuries, the reason evolved with the fast. In the beginning, some worshippers only ate bread. But by the Middle Ages, they were avoiding meat, eggs, and dairy. By the 13th century, the meat-fish divide was firmly established—and Saint Thomas Aquinas gave a lovely answer explaining why: sex, simplicity, and farts.

In Part II of his Summa Theologica, Aquinas wrote:

"Fasting was instituted by the Church in order to bridle the concupiscences of the flesh, which regard pleasures of touch in connection with food and sex. Wherefore the Church forbade those who fast to partake of those foods which both afford most pleasure to the palate, and besides are a very great incentive to lust. Such are the flesh of animals that take their rest on the earth, and of those that breathe the air and their products."

Put differently, Aquinas thought fellow Catholics should abstain from eating land-locked animals because they were too darn tasty. Lent was a time for simplicity, and he suggested that everyone tone it down. It makes sense. In the 1200s, meat was a luxury. Eating something as decadent as beef was no way to celebrate a holiday centered on modesty. But Aquinas had another reason, too: He believed meat made you horny.

"For, since such like animals are more like man in body, they afford greater pleasure as food, and greater nourishment to the human body, so that from their consumption there results a greater surplus available for seminal matter, which when abundant becomes a great incentive to lust. Hence the Church has bidden those who fast to abstain especially from these foods."

There you have it. You can now blame those impure thoughts on a beef patty. (Aquinas might have had it backwards though. According to the American Dietetic Association, red meat doesn't boost "seminal matter." Men trying to increase their sperm count are generally advised to cut back on meat. However, red meat does improve testosterone levels, so it's give-and-take.)

Aquinas gave a third reason to avoid meat: it won't give you gas. "Those who fast," Aquinas wrote, "are forbidden the use of flesh meat rather than of wine or vegetables, which are flatulent foods." Aquinas argued that "flatulent foods" gave your "vital spirit" a quick pick-me-up. Meat, on the other hand, boosts the body's long-lasting, lustful humors—a religious no-no.

But Why Isn't Fish Considered Meat?

The reason is foggy. Saint Paul's first letter to the Corinthians, for one, has been used to justify fasting rules. Paul wrote, " … There is one kind of flesh of men, another flesh of beasts, another of fish, and another of birds" (15:39). That distinction was possibly taken from Judaism's own dietary restrictions, which separates fleishig (which includes land-locked mammals and fowl) from pareve (which includes fish). Neither the Torah, Talmud, or New Testament clearly explains the rationale behind the divide.

It's arbitrary, anyway. In the 17th century, the Bishop of Quebec ruled that beavers were fish. In Latin America, it's OK to eat capybara, as the largest living rodent is apparently also a fish on Lenten Fridays. Churchgoers around Detroit can guiltlessly munch on muskrat every Friday. And in 2010, the Archbishop of New Orleans gave alligator the thumbs up when he declared, “Alligator is considered in the fish family."

Thanks to King Henry VIII and Martin Luther, Protestants don't have to worry about their diet. When Henry ruled, fish was one of England's most popular dishes. But when the Church refused to grant the King a divorce, he broke from the Church. Consuming fish became a pro-Catholic political statement. Anglicans and the King's sympathizers made it a point to eat meat on Fridays. Around that same time, Martin Luther declared that fasting was up to the individual, not the Church. Those attitudes hurt England's fishing industry so much that, in 1547, Henry's son King Edward VI—who was just 10 at the time—tried to reinstate the fast to improve the country's fishing economy. Some Anglicans picked the practice back up, but Protestants—who were strongest in Continental Europe—didn't need to take the bait.

HAS THIS BEEN TOO MUCH INFORMATION? 
I THOUGHT SO TOO!

Tuesday, February 2, 2021

ANOTHER PRAYER


For Peace in Anxiety During the Coronavirus Pandemic

Loving God, we come to you full of anxiety about what may happen in the coming days and weeks. Shower us with the peace Jesus promised to his disciples, and make us into steady pillars for those around us. In this time of uncertainty and epidemic, wake us up to the reminder that we are not alone.

Even as we are asked to keep our distance from others, help us to find ways to reach out to those who need our support. We pray especially for those whose incomes and livelihoods are threatened. For the children who will miss meals due to school closures. For those already isolated, lonely and scared. Loving God, give them your peace, and through our hands ensure they have what they need.

Sustain, strengthen and protect all caregivers. Bless them as they offer compassionate care and show selfless courage in the face of risk. Remind us, each time we wash our hands, that in our baptism you call us to let go of our fears and live in joy, peace, and hope. We ask this in the name of Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen.


 

Wednesday, January 20, 2021

A PRAYER FOR OUR NEW PRESIDENT

First of all, then, I ask that supplications, prayers, petitions, 
and thanksgivings be offered for everyone, for kings and for all 
in authority, that we may lead a quiet and tranquil life in 
all devotion and dignity. This is good and pleasing to God 
our savior who wills everyone to be saved and to 
come to knowledge of the truth.
I Timothy 2:1-4



John Carroll was the first Catholic Bishop in the United States.
Archbishop Carroll wrote the above prayer for our newly formed government
 on November 10, 1791, to be recited in parishes throughout his diocese.





Saturday, March 21, 2020

AN OLD PRAYER FOR NEW TIMES


A PRAYER IN TIMES OF FEAR






PRAY and STAY HOME

In my writing, I have often cited a story about the prophet Muhammad who met a man one day who had left his camel untied. When Muhammad questioned this decision, the man replied, "I trust Allah!' Muhammad answered, "Trust Allah, yes, but tie your camel first!" 

Pray, friends, but also use good sense! Pray and stay home!



(A photo from our local Supplies Over Seas newsletter.) 

S.O.S is a local charity that collects surplus medical supplies and sends them to places with needs - around this country and around the world.  

I have worked with them to send two huge shipping containers of surplus medical supplies to Saint Vincent and the Grenadines over the last few years.  We are working on another one.

Thursday, January 30, 2020

MORE PRAYERS PLEASE!

FERGAL REDMOND


Many of you know my fellow volunteer down in the island missions, Fergal Redmond, of Galway Ireland. 

He has been stuck back in Ireland and unable to return to Saint Vincent on schedule because of lung and heart issues. 

On January 27, he was finally admitted to surgery to have three stints put into the arteries leading into his heart. The surgery was a success. Now he is trying to deal with his breathing issues.

Please continue to keep him in your prayers. He is a very good friend and a most valuable partner in the missions. We both started about the same time. He has been a full-time volunteer and my most valuable contact down in St. Vincent and the Granadines. 

Saturday, September 2, 2017

DON'T PANIC


No Storm Can Shake My Inmost Calm











 “Never let the fear of striking out get in your way.”
Babe Ruth