The Kid Sister of Blessed Imelda

…the continuing conversion of a Catholic homeschooling mom…

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A Word From Father Corapi…

Posted by Anne on October 28, 2008

 

A Call for a Rosary Novena

By Fr. John Corapi

www.fathercorapi.com

Among the most important titles we have in the Catholic Church for the Blessed Virgin Mary are Our Lady of Victory and Our Lady of the Rosary. These titles can be traced back to one of the most decisive times in the history of the world and Christendom. The Battle of Lepanto took place on October 7 (date of feast of Our Lady of Rosary), 1571. This proved to be the most crucial battle for the Christian forces against the radical Muslim navy of Turkey. Pope Pius V led a procession around St. Peter’s Square in Vatican City praying the Rosary. He showed true pastoral leadership in recognizing the danger posed to Christendom by the radical Muslim forces, and in using the means necessary to defeat it. Spiritual  battles require spiritual weapons, and this more than anything was a battle that had its origins in the spiritual order—a true battle between good and evil.

Today we have a similar spiritual battle in progress—a battle between the forces of good and evil, light and darkness, truth and lies, life and death. If we do not soon stop the genocide of abortion in the United States, we shall run the course of all those that prove by their actions that they are enemies of God—total collapse, economic, social, and national. The moral demise of a nation results in the ultimate demise of a nation. God is not a disinterested spectator to the affairs of man. Life begins at conception. This is an unalterable formal teaching of the Catholic Church. If you do not accept this you are a heretic in plain English. A single abortion is homicide. The more than 48,000,000 abortions since Roe v. Wade in the United States constitute genocide by definition. The group singled out for death—unwanted, unborn children.

No other issue, not all other issues taken together, can constitute a proportionate reason for voting for candidates that intend to preserve and defend this holocaust of innocent human life that is abortion.

I strongly urge every one of you to make a Novena and pray the Rosary to Our Lady of Victory between October 27th and Election Day, November 4th. Pray that God’s will be done and the most innocent and utterly vulnerable of our brothers and sisters will be protected from this barbaric and grossly sinful blight on society that is abortion. No woman, and no man, has the right to choose to murder an innocent human being.

May God grant us the wisdom, knowledge, understanding, and counsel to form our conscience in accordance with authentic Catholic teaching, and then vote that well‐formed Catholic conscience.

Please copy, email, link and distribute this article freely.

God Bless You

Fr. John Corapi

www.fathercorapi.com
 

 

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An Accessory to Sin…

Posted by Anne on September 23, 2008

The Nine Ways of Being an Accessory to Another’s Sin.

1. By counsel.
2. By command.
3. By consent.
4. By provocation.
5. By praise or flattery.
6. By concealment.
7. By partaking.
8. By silence.
9. By defense of the ill done.

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Means of Salvation

Posted by Anne on August 12, 2008

… concerning salvation, eternal life, new birth, and justification scripture details the following means:

By Believing in Christ (Jn 3:16; Acts 16:31)?

By Repentance (Acts 2:38; 2 Pet 3:9)?

By Baptism (John 3:5; Acts 2:38; 22:16; 1 Pet 3:21; Titus 3:5)?

By the work of the Spirit (John 3:5; 2 Cor 3:6)?

By declaring with our mouths (Luke 12:8; Rom 10:9)?

By coming to a knowledge of the Truth (1 Tim 2:4; Heb 10:26)?

By Works (Rom 2:6, 7; James 2:21, 24-25)?

By Grace (Acts 15:11; Eph 2:8)?

By His blood (Rom 5:9; Heb 9:22)?

By His righteousness (Rom 5:17; 2 Pet 1:1)?

By His cross (Eph 2:16; Col 2:14)?

“Can we cut any one of these out of the list and proclaim it alone as the means of salvation? Can we be saved without faith? without God’s grace? without repentance? without baptism? without the Spirit? These are all involved and necessary; not one of them can be dismissed as a means of obtaining eternal life. Neither can one be emphasized to the exclusion of another. They are all involved in salvation and entry into the Church. The Catholic Church does not divide these various elements of salvation up, overemphasizing some while ignoring others; rather she holds them all in their fullness.” (forum post quoting author Stephen Ray, Catholic.com)

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Rote Prayers…

Posted by Anne on July 23, 2008

Recently, during a few free minutes I began browsing blogs that I haven’t been able to read as regularly as I normally like. Repetitious on the blog Take the Long Way Home really resonated due to recent events.  I’m coming to the conversation late, but gonna share anyway.

After a year and a half now, things are still not completely settled down yet. Just when my husband was getting ready to start work on this new job and it looked like perhaps, after a year and a half of hell, life might begin to return to normal. Har. Har.  Did I say har? Something I thought I had dealt with, something I thought long behind me, suddenly resurfaced completely out of the blue, and has caused an intense struggle for me spiritually.  A battle of similar intensity to my Temptation post, if on a completely different issue, and in a way this battle involved temptations of an interior choice, a choice of reaction to circumstances.

Last weekend I hit a wall.  I ended up in the Adoration chapel, having been sent to the church by a VERY concerned husband (who also happened to be wearing a large amount of my spiritual viscera from inquiring at just the wrong moment).  Father had to go say a Mass elsewhere but took a moment to inquire if I was alright.  He got the bones of the matter and said that I was in the right place and that I shouldn’t be afraid to shout at Jesus (and he nodded at the Blessed Sacrament in the Tabernacle) if I needed to. 

God bless him.

I sat there in the chapel aware of others cleaning up from and leaving the Mass just celebrated, my throat aching from the extreme control it took to not sob violently and hysterically (in fact, that was pretty much the state I was in when my poor husband spoke to me), feeling completely incapable of indulging in the freedom Father had just offered due to my concern for the impact on others who might hear and be as appalled at my violent honesty with God as my spouse. 

I thought to pray, but there were no words really… In fact, when Father had leaned over to inquire, I shook my head mutely for a few moments not knowing where to start until the guilt of wasting his time when he needed to be elsewhere brought them forth.  Then the Divine Mercy Chaplet popped into my head.  I desperately needed God’s mercy in that moment and it would give me words. 

The Chaplet begins with the Creed.  I began, “I believe…” and suddenly words exploded out of the depths. “Lord, I believe! You know I believe! Forgive my voicing even the temptation that I was feeling and in such nasty language.” Over and over, I cried out to God with all of my interior being.

Incapable of completing the Creed, but believing all that it teaches and trusting God to credit it as said, I began the other prayers.

On the Our Father bead…

Eternal Father, I offer you the Body and Blood, Soul and Divinity, of our Lord Jesus Christ in atonement for our sins and those of the whole world.

Then a Hail Mary bead…

For the sake of His sorrowful passion, have mercy on us and on the whole world.

I lost it again on the word ‘passion’ and once again the words came.  The Chaplet dissolved into a mixture of itself (ie the prayers above) and my own tortured version of prayers about my sin, the wounds of our Lord, and my desperate need for mercy and strength.  The repetitious prayers gave me a voice, a starting place, when in my agony and sorrow I had none. They were there when only the determination to reject the self and sinful reactions that were coming in the midst of my anger and grief and choose what God would have me do instead was left, along with the sorrow for what I had given voice to in a moment of intense struggle interrupted. They were there when that determination intermingled with my struggles against the natural, selfish, reactions to my circumstances, and my failures in that struggle, had immobilized me at the feet of God.

Unlike Joy in the referenced blog entry, I did not exude peace to those around me. My face was set in the rigor mortis of a struggle for silence, eyes swollen and red, hot tears tracing former tracks down my face. Still, like the blog’s author, when I am told the Rosary or Divine Mercy Chaplet are simply vain, repetitious prayer, I will think back on that day when those prayers helped me in battle. I will think back to when those precious prayers gave words to my pain, voice to my pleas, enabling me to cling to my precious Lord, and I will once again pray the Divine Mercy Chaplet and ask mercy, for myself, and for all those who will face such moments, have no such prayer ready on their lips, and be incapable of praying for themselves.

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What is Belief?

Posted by Anne on April 1, 2008

On the forums I frequent, the issue of what belief is came up on a thread about the Perpetual Virginity of Mary.  What exactly is required of a Catholic when we are asked to ‘believe’. 

 One of the other Catholic posters quoted a good definition:

Belief: (be and lyian, to hold dear). That state of the mind by which it assents to propositions, not by reason of their intrinsic evidence, but because of authority.

 I am fortunate enough to be spending a few days with my best friend who lives several states away from me.  She has a two hour Adoration slot from 2-4 am at her parish each Monday night… or is it Tuesday morning?  I digress… Anyway, I am able to go with her when I visit and as my current parish has no real Adoration to speak of, it is a great blessing.  As I spent time in meditation and prayer, I came across an article which really addressed this line of dscussion and the Holy Spirit brought to mind some recent things which all tied together neatly with her definition.  I shared that on the forum and wanted to ’store’ it here for future reference.

There is a fabulous editorial at the beginning of the April 2008 Magnificat, written by Peter John Cameron, O.P., that speaks to what it is to believe (his words and clips are in green so as to differentiate them from my own thoughts). 

Cameron discusses belief not only as faith in God, but rather reminds the reader of the tie between that ‘mature’ or ‘advanced’ belief in God etc and the smaller ones we engage in every day without recognizing them for what they are.  Such examples include “a husband [waking]  up in the morning believing that his wife still loves him; the food that a waiter puts in front of us we eat believing it not to be poison; we believe that the 7:19 train scheduled for Baltimore will actually take us there and not to Sheboygan.” 

Cameron goes on to say “Without “belief” our life would be an endless process of interrogating, examining, second-guessing, and proofing.  Saint Thomas Aquinas in a Lenten sermon once said, “How would anyone be able to live unless they put belief in someone?  How would they even believe who their own father might be?  And therefore it is necessary that human beings believe someone about those things which they cannot know perfectly by themselves.”  Believing launches our humanity and enables us to go forward in life.”  

The Catechism says believing “is an authentically human act” (CCC 154).  We ‘believe’ because we are human – it is our nature.  To refuse to believe is to refuse to be human – to refuse to hope and to wonder – to refuse to be teachable and malleable.  To refuse to believe hardens our heart because in doing so we deny a part of ourselves – the very heart/essence of who and what we are.  

Cameron quotes Benedict, “The act of saying “I believe” is “an act in which the will and the understanding, the teaching and the guidance I have been given, are all cooperatively involved.  This act transcends my own limits.” (Pope Benedict XVI)” 

To refuse to believe anything but what we ‘know’ by our own ability, exclusive of any other human being, is to refuse knowledge entirely. It is to refuse to engage in the communal process of human thought.  Even scientists ‘believe’ in what has been studied and learned before.  They did not find it out themselves, but trusted in the ‘belief’ and work of those who came before… even if they were able to ‘prove’ by their own experimentation the ‘truth’ of previous minds, they are standing on the shoulders of such men… on the ‘foundation’ that those scientists ‘belief’ which existed even BEFORE they could ‘prove’ what they intuited to be ‘true’ has given. 

Indeed, it is often the way that science, beginning with a hypothesis, BELIEVES before it can PROVE… many times continuing to believe in the face of great opposition.  Pope Benedict XVI said that “for the believing Christian the words ‘I believe’ articulate a kind of certainty that is in many respects a higher degree of certainty than that of science… We live faith, not as a hypothesis, but as the certainty on which our life is based.” 

Cameron continues “To say “I believe” means that I refuse to live by my own ideas, my constructs, my preconceptions, my self-imposed measure.  In the words of Pope Benedict, “To believe means that we become like angels. We can fly, because we no longer weigh so heavily in our own estimation.  To become a believer means to escape our own gravity… Someone who believes has found in the truth the pearl for which he is ready to give everything, even himself.” 

To refuse to believe is to CHOOSE to limit ourselves and to CHOOSE to limit God.  It is to say “No – The mental construct I have of You is big enough for me – wondrous enough – I don’t want a God I can’t understand and comprehend.”   To refuse to believe is to become a black hole (RNW dropped that idea in conversation and I’ve taken it and run wild) and, overwhelmed by our own gravity, consume not only ourselves but all that is good and light within our grasp.  In the end that becomes too much for us and instead of the apparent destroying of all that which we have consumed, we are destroyed.  (Hawking radiation analogy here, though I realize that all analogies break down in the end – some in more stellar fashion than others… pun intended…) We become not larger, but smaller, until at last, overwhelmed by our efforts to deny and annihilate all that is light and good, we cease to exist entirely. 

Cameron again… “Belief in God changes us. Faith is a way of knowing….  As St. Augustine expressed it, “I believe, in order to understand; and I understand, the better to believe” (see CCC 158).” The Catechism says that “what moves us to believe is not the fact that revealed truths appear as true and intelligible in the light of our natural reason: we believe ‘because of the authority of God himself who reveals them’” (CCC 156, citing Dei Filius 3) just as our reason for believing our husband, the waiter, and the train schedule come from the authority of those in a position to know who reveal them to us.  

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Notice of Amended Post…

Posted by Anne on February 17, 2008

I would like to notify readers of an amended post.  It has been brought to my attention this evening that someone has taken issue with a post on this blog made in February of 2007 entitled Speak It, Live It… or Not… .  In the interest of fairness, I have included the exact wording of the main post that inspired such conclusions so that the reader may correct their understanding as they see fit.

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Apologies…

Posted by Anne on May 11, 2007

James H has posted in the comments and said I need to get blogging. **Thanks James!** He isn’t the first to say it… but here’s to him being the last.  My apologies for the unexplained and rather lengthy hiatus.  I suppose it would be sufficient to say that I am officially the homeschooling parent of a teen and two preteens with only one little darling left in the ’sweet spot’ and even she has her less than sweet days.  However, as if that weren’t enough… life threw me a curve recently.  I will endeavor to do better… and I’ve missed you all too!

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Catholic Carnival

Posted by Anne on April 18, 2007

The Catholic Carnival: Divine Mercy in our Lives is up over at To Jesus Through Mary!  I’ll try to join you there but as you can tell from my lack of posts recently, things didn’t slow down after Easter like I thought they would.  Hope to post in the next day or two.  Happy Reading!

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Gone…

Posted by Anne on April 6, 2007

…like a freight train, Gone like yesterday, Gone like a soldier… oh… sorry.

 Seriously, I’m gone to celebrate Easter with some friends who are being received into the Church this Easter Vigil and so will not be on much if at all.  God’s peace and blessings be with you all during this Holy season.

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Remember Church Shopping?

Posted by Anne on March 15, 2007

Well, Red Neck Woman received a comment on that post and has responded.  Response to ty23’s Comment Regarding My Church Shopping Post  is long but well worth the read.  It is an interesting dialogue to say the least…

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