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NEW BENEDICTINE SAINT

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VENERABLE BERNARDO VAZ de CONCELOS was a Benedictine monk, mystic, poet, and authored  "Canticle of Love". He studied at the University of Coimbraand was part of the St Vincent de Paul Society which did works of evangelization and charity, especially with the poor. He was devoted to regular Eucharistic Adoration.  He was also an editor of the journal which studied democracy.

Venerable Bernardo was born in São Romão Corgo (Celorico de Basto), Portugal in 1902.  He discerned a call to the monastic life and entered the Monastery of Singeverga in 1924. His name in religion was Brother Bernardo of the Annunciation. He was sent to the Abbey of Mont-César in Belgiumto study theology, but returned home in a year’s time due a diagnosis of tuberculosis.

The illness weakened his body and yet he was peaceful and trusting in Divine Providence. In a letter to a fellow patient Bernardo wrote:

“Don’t get delivered to sadness that only serves to disable our best energies … it expands your heart and let Him be the life-giving Sun of joy. Joy, but with so many ordeals?  The cross follows us wherever we go and we have to take it.”

While he made his solemn profession in 1928 he would die before he was ordained to the priesthood. 

The last six years of his life were filled with great suffering but he knew how to offer it for the sake of others, making it a "Song of Love"   

His poetry deeply impressed the Catholic media of the 1930s to this day his poems catapult our souls   It penetrates the "theological-liturgical sense of the sacraments”, giving and sacrifices He also wrote the book "The Mass and the Inner Life”.

Brother Bernardo died in the early hours of July 4, 1932, after a long suffering. He is buried in the parish church of São Romão do Corgo.

The holiness of this Portuguese monk and poet "is now recognized not only by the great number of faithful who admire him,  but also by theologians, Bishops and Cardinals of the Holy See who have studied his writings and holiness of life.   We pray that we soon can elevate him to the ranks of a great Benedictine saint.



HOLY COUPLE DEDICATED TO THE WRETCHED

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As readers know I am always on the hunt for new saints and saints to be proclaimed by the Church. Having a great devotion to St. Marianne of Molokai, I was fascinated to learn of a French couple, both up for canonization, who gave their lives to the lepers in Africa.

SERVANTS of GOD MADELEINE and RAOUL FOLLEREAU, met when they were 15 years old.  Madeleine Boudou was born in Nevers in 1902 and Raoul in  1903.  They were married in 1925. They had 30 years together, being inseparable, always together as one in their work.



At the age of 17 Raoul  published “Book of Love”, centered on the phrase “Being happy is to make others happy.” It sold 10 million copies and was translated into 35 languages. Being a journalist, Raoul was sent as a special envoy of the French newspaper La Nation to follow in the footsteps of Blessed Charles de Foucauld. 


He spent a time of solitude in Tamanrasset, Algeria, a city surrounded by desert among the Tuareg people. Here he heard the voice of Bl. Charles.  When he returned to France, he  had no doubt he and Madeleine would devote their lives to lepers. But after a few years Europewas taken over by Nazi madness.

Raoul was a celebrity: a writer, a poet, and journalist. He had always professed his Catholic faith and his anti-Nazi beliefs openly, to the point of publicly describing Hitler as an “antichrist.” He went into hiding like many in the French resistance, and sought shelter in a convent of nuns on the outskirts of Lyon. He was the gardener, but he continued to work for “his lepers.”


As the war raged on, in 1942 he launched his “first crusade:” an initiative of solidarity called “The hour of the poor.” Over the next few years, others campaigns followed: “Christmas of Fr. Foucauld,” in which he invited people to donate for children in need, “The shoe of the leper,” the “Strike of egoism” and “The day of the leper.” Thanks to his charisma and tenacity, these initiatives enjoyed incredible success.

After World War II, Raoul and Madeleine  traveled from Africa to Asia, stopping at several islands in the Indian Ocean to fully understand the harrowing reality of the lepers: “In the 20th century of Christianity I found lepers in jail, locked up in mental hospitals, buried in desecrated cemeteries and confined in the desert with barbed wire, search lights and machine guns. I have seen their wounds covered with flies, their contaminated hovels, their guards with rifles. I have seen an unimaginable world of horror, sorrow and despair.”

In 1953, with money they had gathered by participating in many conferences around the world, the City of Lepers was inaugurated in Adzopé in the Ivory Coast. It was made up of houses built in the forest, laboratories, a radio station and cinema. Millions of other lepers around the world would also be helped in the years that followed.

In 1968, Roual managed to get 4 million people involved, especially young people, to ask the UN to donate what would be “the cost of a day of war for peace,” and USA and USSR to donate the cost of a bomber to fight leprosy.

The request was ignored, but Roual’s  numbers were impressive: he cured and healed a million lepers; he traveled two million miles to collect millions of dollars for them. Thanks to his dedication, the wounds of leprosy have been diminished.

In all his work, Raoul always had Madeleine at his side as secretary, assistant, counselor — a pure, loving presence. They continually traveled together.

“When you are in two, you are invincible,” said Raoul. He never missed a chance to recall that he could do so only because she was at his side.


Raoul Follereau died in 1977, Madeleine Boudou in 1991. The beatification process began for each separately some years ago. In addition to the great work for lepers, which continues today, the love between those two is a beautiful testament they left. It was their mutual love that guided Follereau’s work. It made him understand that the world needs bread, but also tenderness.


The work of Raoul and Madeleine Follereau lives on through dozens
of organizations around the world. Since 1961, the activity of Raoul Follereau
on behalf of leprosy sufferers in the southern part of the world is continued
by the Italian Association Friends of Raoul Follereau.







HOPE FOR US ALL!

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Like everyone today I sometimes get caught up into the web of negativity regarding the situation- crises- in our world today, but some interesting facts have recently come to light from Nicholas Kristof of the New York Times.  It seems that 2018 was “actually the best year in human history.”

Heifer International

Nicholas is a winner of two Pulitzer Prizes, a regular CNN contributor,  and writer of an op-ed column for The New York Times since November 2001. According to The Washington Post,  he "rewrote opinion journalism" with his emphasis on human rights abuses and social injustices, such as human trafficking and the Darfur conflict.  Archbishop Desmond Tutu of South Africa has described him as an "honorary African" for shining a spotlight on neglected conflicts.

While most of us  think global poverty is getting worse, in reality it is better. In the early 1980s, 44% of the world lived in extreme poverty, which was then defined as making less than $2 a day.  Today less than 10% live in that same poverty.

Every day some amazing things happened last year: over 300,000 people got clean drinking water-  which must mean less disease, almost 300,000 gained electricity,  and over 600,00 hooked up to internet-  this is per day!

All of this means people in third world countries will live longer, have better education and generally have a better life.
Heifer International
So when you are tempted to fall back into a hopeless feeling of “why try?”  just remember that there is hope for us all.  And remember these advances do not just happen on their own, it is caring individuals who make them happen.

AN AMERICAN SAINT IN PERU

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The Studio of Maneno
Outside of the Studio Maneno
When most Americans hear the name Peru, they think of Lima or Machu Picchu, but those who have followed my blogs from the early days, know there is another part where I spent a total of several months- very north and very dear to my heart. 

Our next man being considered for canonization is an American who spent 20 years in the Prelature of Chulucanas, Peru.  This small, almost unknown to Americans, town, is famous for its pottery, and I made several trips there, always in the evenings, as the trek was inland and hot.  I not only brought home some pieces of the famed pottery- many birds-  but one piece of Mother & Child with bird, was our monastery Christmas card that first year of my visit.


Our Christmas Card Madonna


SERVANT of GOD JOHN JOSEPH McKNIFF, an Augustinian, was born on September 5, 1905, in Media, Pennsylvania.  After completing grammer school, he entered Villanova Prep on the campus of VillanovaCollege, as a postulant. He was accepted into the novitiate in 1923, professed simple vows on June 22, 1924, and solemn vows three years later. In 1927 John graduated with an A.B. degree from Villanova College was sent to the Order's International College, Saint Monica, in Rome, to study theology. He was ordained to the priesthood in 1930, and continued post-graduate studies at the Roman Academy of Saint Thomas, where he earned a doctorate in philosophy in 1932. 
In 1960 Father McKniff was granted an S.T.L. by the Order.

Father McKniff's first assignment after his return to the United States was  teaching. In 1935 Father McKniff volunteered to go to the Philippines, where he taught chemistry at the Collegeof Saint Augustine, Iloilo, on the island of Panay. A serious accident in the chemistry laboratory hospitalized him, and in 1939 he was sent to VillanovaPreparatory School, Ojai, CA, to recuperate.

A few months later he was sent to Cubato teach at the Colegio San Agustin. Within two years he was named pastor of Santo Cristo del Buen Viaje in the old section of HavanaCity, and for the next 27 years he served the spiritual and physical needs of the people there. He opened a clinic, provided a parish school, enrolled many in the Legion of Mary, and introduced the Augustinian Third Order. With the coming to power of the Castro regime he was one of the few American priests, and the sole Augustinian, not expelled by the government. From 1962 to 1968 he continued to care for the faithful under the most difficult conditions.

When, in 1968, he was compelled for reasons of health to return to the United Statesthe Cuban government took the opportunity to revoke his passport and refuse permission to return. He then served the needs of the people in Troy, N.Y., and Lawrence, Massachusetts.


In 1972, after several requests, Father McKniff was permitted to go to the Prelature of Chulucanas, Peru. There he assisted Bishop John McNabb, O.S.A., in several parishes. He was associate pastor of San Jose Obrero in Chulucanas and taught at the diocesan seminary in Trujillo. During stops at Miami, he would visit former members of Santo Cristo Parish living in exile. In 1994, while in Miami he became ill and on the morning of his flight to Lima, Peru, was taken to PalmettoHospital in Miami. Over the next weeks his condition grew worse. Visited by many Cuban friends and with his brother Augustinians at his bedside, he died on March 26, 1994. Father McKniff was 88 years of age. 

In 1999, following upon the steady requests of many people of Peru, the diocesan process of the Cause of canonization of Father McKniff was initiated,  not in his native country, but by the poor people in Chulucanas.  Here is one priest who "died with his boots on".

BISHOP WHO LOVED BASEBALL AND AFRICA

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It isn’t often that one finds a future saint from their own Alma Mater. While he was educated by the Jesuits, in high school and at University, he entered another Order.

SERVANT OF GOD VINCENT JOSEPH McCAULEY, was born in  1906 in Council Bluffs, Iowa (right across the great Missouri River, from Omaha, where Creighten University is).

He was the eldest of six children. His father was a wire chief for American Telephone & Telegraph in Omaha, Nebraska and a  member of the Knights of Columbus, and his mother was active in the altar guild and various prayer circles. These groups later assisted Father McCauley during his missionary efforts during troubled periods of the Great Depression and World War II.

Vincent attended Creighton Preparatory School, where he excelled in sports, especially baseball. He even played semi-professional baseball in Omaha to earn extra money. He graduated in 1924 and entered at Creighton University's College of Artsand Letters as part of the class of 1928. His time at Creighton was cut short when members of the Congregation of Holy Cross gave a parish mission at St. Francis Xavier in the fall of 1924. Like many young Catholics, Vincent was "enamored by the mystique of Notre Dame." In November 1924, he left to join the Congregation of Holy Cross.

He professed perpetual vows in 1929 and graduated from the University of Notre Dame in June 1930. He then went to the Foreign Missionary Seminary in Washington, D.C. He was ordained a priest in 1934

Father McCauley was formed at the Foreign Mission Seminary to serve as an overseas missionary. Years later, in a lecture at Creighton,  he at least partially attributed his motivation to be a missionary to the example of sharing and self-sacrifice that he experienced from family and friends at home in Council Bluffs. After his 1934 ordination, the Congregation of Holy Cross, with the economic hardship of the Great Depression, had insufficient funds to send Father Vincent  overseas.

In 1936 with a  recovering economy Father Vincent was sent to  East Bengal, a territory that roughly corresponds to modern day Bangladesh.  From 1936 to 1939  he worked in education, teaching in a high school and forming catechists. His mission work instilled a lifelong commitment in  the formation of indigenous clergy. In 1940 he contracted Malaria and spent several months recuperating.

He was appointed rector and superior of Little Flower Seminary in Bandhura. His health remained fragile, battling relapses of malaria and other tropical maladies with regular frequency. But his enthusiasm for the mission could not conquer his persistent health problems. In December 1943, while on a trip to Dhaka, a severe case of phlebitis necessitated a two-month hospitalization. Eventually, in the midst of World War II, Holy Cross prevailed upon the U.S. Army for assistance in providing a medical evacuation for him. Flown back to the U.S., he began an extended period of recovery.

In 1945, Father Vincent became assistant superior of the Foreign Mission Seminary in Washington, D.C. In 1946, he was appointed superior and rector, a post he would hold for six years.

In 1952, he was appointed procurator for the missions. During this period he began his first treatment at the Mayo Clinic for Skin cancer. As the chief fundraiser for Holy Cross Missions in Bengal, he bragged that he would log 80,000 miles annually to preach missions and raise funds.

Having successfully guided the Holy Cross mission in Ugandafrom its beginning, Father Vincent was the most natural fit to continue leadership as the first bishop of FortPortal. He was consecrated a bishop at the Basilica of the Sacred Heart at Notre Dame in May 1961.

The independence movement in Uganda influenced his initial leadership. He organized his diocese according to principles that had guided his missionary efforts for the previous twenty years, namely: Inculturation and promotion of the local church and local clergy.

As Bishop he attended all four sessions of the Second Vatican Council, which proved to be a strong influence on his leadership as bishop. While he labored to establish the necessary financing for his young diocese, he also sought to provide pastoral leadership for his diocese. In the mid-1960s, Bishop McCauley was an advocate for refugees from Rwanda, the Congo, and the Sudan. He worked to form close bonds among priests of diverse ages and nationalities from different cultures and religious orders  while he also had to overcome conflict among the tribes of his diocese. 

He also led and supported the development of religious congregations of women and promoted their movement into new areas of ministry. Bishop McCauley was instrumental in the promotion of the laity and ecumenism and also led great strides in the area of education. He accomplished all this while suffering from repeated bouts with skin cancer, malaria, and other ailments.

From the outset of his time as bishop of FortPortal, Bishop McCauley worked to organize and to promote the work of the Catholic Church in East Africa. In 1964, during the Second Vatican Council, he became chairman of the Association of Member Episcopal Conferences in Eastern Africa (AMECEA). As chairman, he guided the bishops to present a voice at Vatican II, guided the association through its first three triennial plenary meetings, and arranged the basic organization of AMECEA and its departments. Along with Fr. Killian Flynn, O.F.M., Cap., the organization's first secretary-general, Bishop McCauley rescued the organization's finances. He also established the Gaba Pastoral Institute for the formation of catechists. When his period of chairmanship ended in 1973, he replaced Father Flynn as secretary-general. In assuming the new responsibility, moved from FortPortal to Nairobi.

 Bishop McCauley suffered from facial skin cancer for much of his adult life. In all, he had more than fifty surgeries. As he grew older, additional health 
concerns emerged. In September 1976, a plastic aorta was inserted into his heart at the Mayo Clinic. Beginning in July 1982, he began to suffer acute pulmonary hemorrhages. In October 1982, he returned to the U.S. for treatment. After a particularly severe hemorrhage, aware of the risks, Bishop McCauley undertook exploratory surgery and died while undergoing surgery in 1980. The Catholic University of Eastern Africa named its new library after this man who is still remembered in the hearts of his people.


PRAYER AND GOOD WORKS- A NEW SAINT FOR LAYWOMEN

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Woman at Prayer - Edgar Maxence ( French- d. 1954)




On February 18, it was announced from the Vatican,that a lay woman is being considered for canonization.SERVANT of GOD  ENRICA ONORANTEwas a wife and mother who became known for her charitable work with developing countries.  I could find nothing about her either in Italian or English, but am sure there will be more information soon.

While her life, from childhood, was marked by a number of trials, she was known to face them  always trusting in the Lord.  A profound life of prayer enabled her to internalize her physical and moral suffering and spurred her to offer herself as a ‘living victim’, wholly abandoning herself to God’s will.

Enrica became best known for her work as secretary for the Third World Help Committee of the Italian Episcopal Conference, which provided aid to various developing countries around the world.

Discrete, attentive and always ready to welcome in order to serve, she made herself available for any task to further the mission of the Church. With a truly ‘maternal’ style, she encouraged many men and women religious and priests from around the world in their pastoral work, thereby earning their esteem and affection.

Her reputation for holiness and charity spread, and there is even an “Enrica Onorante Home” for impoverished children and their families named after her in Beira, Mozambique.


Edgar Maxence
She died only in 2008 and is already being considered for canonization, as an example to all of the good we can do for those not so fortunate either through our prayer, our good works or both.



PRIESTS CALLED TO HOLINESS

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It isn’t often that I deal with Church politics in this Blog, but the recently released 8 points that came out of the Bishops' meetings last week in Rome regarding the sex scandal in our Church left me baffled.  I felt they did not get to the heart of the problem and what we are going to do regarding priestly formation.  Then came this article about Bishop Thomas Olmsted’s view of the crises.  After I read it I felt he must have read In Sinu Jesu(see Blog Mar. 2017).


In face of the sex abuse scandals in the Church, Bishop Thomas Olmsted of Phoenix issued a column this month asking the question: “What went wrong in priestly formation?”

Bishop Thomas Olmsted highlighted in his Feb. 17 column at The Catholic Sun three factors that contributed to the clerical sexual abuse scandal: the sexual revolution, weak seminaries, and clericalism.

He said the sexual revolution, which in the 1960s challenged the ethics of sexual behaviors in the West, had sought to promote a false idea of “free love.” With the surge of an overly sexualized culture, he said, the movement created long-lasting problems.  

“This revolution promised ‘free love,’ happiness and liberation from purported encumbrances of religion and tradition, particularly the Commandments,” he said.
“Sadly, the over-focus on sexual pleasure, the reducing and labeling of persons to their attractions (LGBTQ, etc.) and the viewing of persons as objects for pleasure have led to unprecedented numbers of infidelity, divorce, loneliness and abuse in the greater culture.”

He said the crisis was worsened by inadequate responses from the Church, citing silence and “harsh moralizing.” This only strangled the message of God’s love and distorted a full understanding of the human person, he said.

However, the bishop said there were also appropriate responses, including St. John Paul II's Theology of the Body. He said this answer promoted a greater comprehension of true love alongside responsibility.
“Related to the general confusion about human love caused by the sexual revolution, we also suffered from an insufficient understanding of priestly celibacy,” Bishop Olmsted noted, adding that Pope Francis has affirmed the value of celibacy for the priesthood.



“Indeed, in a world that believes that sexual pleasures must have free reign, even at the cost of innocent unborn children, there is need for those men and women who proclaim by their lives that ultimate love and fulfillment come from God and that self-mastery is certainly possible with God’s grace. Chaste celibacy, received as a gift of God and formed through spiritual and human direction, is a needed response to a false idea of 'free love.'”

Amid the confusion caused by the sexual revolution “Church leaders failed to adequately screen applicants” to seminary, he said. “It was often assumed that the human and the spiritual qualities of the man were present and sufficient. This was a poor assumption, and it led to too little consideration of a man’s human virtues and of his relationship with Jesus Christ. As a result, some candidates unfit for ministry were accepted.”

Dissent from orthodoxy was present in many seminaries in the 1970s and '80s, he said, especially regarding sexual ethics.
“For example, the masculine spousal dimension in which a priest is called to love as Christ loved His Bride the Church (Cf. Eph 5) was not taught much at all. As a result, the priesthood was too frequently seen, not as a life of masculine love, but merely pertaining to certain ministerial functions. It was erroneously thought among some that the nature of the priesthood itself would change.”
Bishop Olmsted added that “some seminaries became places with not only men who lacked a true calling from Jesus to the priesthood but even where a homosexual subculture sprang up.”

“It is difficult to deny this problem considering the high percentage of abuse cases that occurred between men and post-pubescent boys.”
“On several occasions, our Holy Father has stated that clericalism played a part in the current scandals as priests and bishops sought to cover up abuses,” the bishop noted. He added that “disproportionate esteem for priests by the faithful, at times, was (and still can be) problematic.”
He said the priest, like any man, is a sinner in need of redemption, but the state is one of service.




“One should enter the priesthood through a calling from Jesus to share in His mission. That mission is to proclaim Christ Crucified and Risen from the dead,” he recalled.
“Especially in this country, Church leaders have been slow to embrace this mission and settled for simply maintaining her membership rather than boldly evangelizing the culture.”

The bishop noted that “instead of being Catholic out of conviction and a deep relationship with Jesus, the faith has become for too many something merely cultural,” and he recalled Archbishop José Gomez' statement that Christ “did not come to suffer and die so that He could make ‘cultural Catholics'”.
“Cultural Catholicism”, Bishop Olmsted said, “lacks true conviction to follow Jesus when His teachings differ from ways of the culture.”
He said that many of the concerns in priestly formation “are now being addressed well,” and recalled that St. John Paul II was “convinced that the answer to these scandals is great fidelity.”

“Like other times of storms in the Church, Jesus continues to renew His Mystical Body through holiness,” Bishop Olmsted concluded. “You and I are called to be saints.”


SACRED MUSIC IN MODERN TIMES

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Praying Nuns Singing-  (c.1400
Because our prayer in the monastery is centered on the Gregorian Chant, we are especially sensitive to the cacophony which is often common in parishes today.  Personally I would rather have a choir which does all the music than the free for all which occurs.    Pope Francis has lamented “a certain mediocrity, superficiality and banality” in liturgical celebrations that acts to the detriment of their “beauty and intensity.”  And I would add to the detriment of one’s prayer.  It is hard to lift ones’ eyes to the Lord, when the person next to you or behind you is singing full throttle, missing every note in the book!

In January Archbishop Alexander Sample of Portland, Oregon issued a pastoral letter, “Sing to the Lord a New Song”, which proclaimed that sacred music has a special role in the Catholic liturgy.  There are “serious challenges in our own day” for efforts to seek to renew the liturgy “in a way that respects, fosters and promotes the true nature of the Mass itself.”

“We should always aim high to offer God the best and the most beautiful music of which we are capable,” Archbishop Sample said. Mass requires an “art of celebrating” in which perhaps nothing is more important than the place of sacred music.

Gregorian chant should enjoy a “pride of place” in the Roman liturgy, according to the Second Vatican Council, and the faithful should be led to sing in Gregorian chant as far as is proper as a way to participate in the liturgy.


Alleluia- Thomas Cooper Gotches (England d.  1931)

The Archbishop acknowledged that Gregorian chant does not presently enjoy pride of place; it is rarely if ever heard. He said this situation must be addressed with “great effort and serious catechesis” to help it more widely become a normal part of the Mass.

Sacred music has a twofold purpose: “the glory of God and the sanctification of the faithful.”  Because sacred music is so essential, Catholics must reject the common idea that four songs can be chosen and “tacked on.” Sacred music’s role is “to help us sing and pray the texts of the Mass itself, not just ornament it.”



St. Cecilia (Little Wymondley, England
The Archbishop’s pastoral letter traces teachings about sacred music from various popes and councils of the Church.  Citing a sermon of St. Augustine, he said, “the new man sings a new song. Singing is an expression of joy and, if we consider the matter, an expression of love.” Pope Benedict XVI said that the Church has created, and still creates “music and songs which represent a rich patrimony of faith and love.” This heritage “must not be lost.”

 The Archbishop explained that universality in music means “any composition of sacred music, even one which reflects the unique culture of a particular region, would still be easily recognized as having a sacred character.” Holiness is “a universal principle that transcends culture.”

There is a lack of understanding and confusion about what music is proper to Mass, the archbishop said, adding, “not every form or style of music is capable of being rendered suitable.” A Gloria set in a polka beat or in a rock music style is not sacred music, because these styles, however delightful in a dance hall or concert setting, do not have the qualities of sanctity, beauty and universality proper to sacred music.

Archbishop Sample entrusted the effort to improve sacred music to St. Cecilia, the patroness of church musicians, and the Blessed Virgin Mary, Immaculately Conceived.

“May the renewal and reform of sacred music in the Archdiocese of Portland lead us together to a beautiful and worthy celebration of the sacred mysteries of the Holy Mass, for the glory of God and the sanctification of all the faithful.”




ASH WEDNESDAY

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Today we begin, with Ash Wednesday, our trek into Lent as we plod along, hopefully with Jesus, towards His final days on earth and the glorious Resurrection.   



Trek you ask?  Plod?  According to the dictionary (yes, some of us still use them) a trek is a trip or movement especially when involving difficulties or complex organization : an arduous journey.   To plod is to trudge, walk heavily, drag oneself, lumber or slog. Slog?  Where is she getting these words, you may ask?  Not often used?   Slog,  when used as a noun, is a spell of difficult, tiring work or traveling.  I am sure by now you get the point.

This season is not meant to be a rapid, easy  trip, but rather one that is slow, difficult and full of negation - not giving up easy things, like sugar and TV programs, but rather a death to our old, bad habits. It is a time to look to  the Gospels for Jesus’ example how we should live our lives, with prayer, inner joy, and kindness, thanking God for the many graces we daily receive. In the words of St. Benedict only then can we look forward to holy Easter with joy and spiritual longing.

In the words of Pope Emeritus Benedict: We begin today the liturgical season of Lent with the thought-provoking rite of the imposition of ashes, through which we wish to take on the commitment to convert our hearts to the horizons of grace. In general, in common opinion, this time runs the risk of being marked by sadness, by the darkness of life. Instead, it is a precious gift of God; it is an intense time full of meanings in the journey of the Church; it is the itinerary to the Lord’s Easter...

It is important to remember that even Jesus did not run to the top of Calvary with His Cross. It was  a slow trek!  And He fell along the way, sometimes rising only with the help of another. May His Blessed Mother be there for us as we slog along in the steps of her Son!



GOOD SHEPHERDS IN OUR CHURCH

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Each Lent in the monastery we take a theme for the focus of our prayer and this year it  is for our 2 Holy Fathers and the priesthood -  for priests in dire need and those who are following in the footsteps of holiness.  I also especially pray for those who have given their lives in prayer for the needs of priests, be they other religious or  laypeople.

In spite of the great scandal in our present Church regarding priests, there are many more who daily struggle to be  faithful witnesses proclaiming the Presence of Jesus through preaching the Gospel, praying the Mass, administering the sacraments and  being true shepherds to their flock.

Emmanuel Cardinal Suhard, who served as Archbishop of Paris
in the post-war years, expressed this mystery of the priesthood in a pastoral letter that he wrote on Holy Thursday 1949:
At the altar, the priest, like Christ, is the [sacrificial] victim. But he is also the sacrificer; he is then the dreadful man, the one who works death, the one who slays sin and burns it, the one who is crucified and who crucifies, the one who cannot save the world, nor will consent to its salvation, save through nailing it to the Cross.

“Without the shedding of blood there is no redemption” (Heb. 9.22)… That is why the priest in relation to society must always be somehow or other itsadversary. He will never be forgiven for recalling and perpetuating, from  generation to generation, Christ, whom they thought they had suppressed forever… Far from being a fatherly adviser or a good-natured citizen, a priest is, like God, a terrible being. He is a fighting man… Like Saint Michael, he challenges the Dragon, dragging him out of ambush by healing men’s hearts,  so as to crush one by one his ever resurgent heads. Although it is too frequently overlooked, a priest is an exorcist…; he has the power and the duty of expelling the Devil (Cardinal Suhard, Priests Among Men).

THE HEART OF A PRIEST

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This past week we had a special “guest” in Seattle, as the  relic of St. Jean Vianney’s incorrupt heart was given for veneration. The Shrine of Ars, France, entrusted to the Knights of Columbus the relic for a national tour in the U.S., from November 2018 through early June 2019.






St. John, also known as the Cure of Ars,  whose holiness and integrity is a model for clergy and laity alike, is the special patron of parish priests. Those of us who grew up Catholic, in the years when we studied the saints, knew well  the story of this holy priest and prayed to him for our own parish priests.

He was the first to experience the Divine Mercy,  which he then brought to countless others as he heard confessions up to 18 hours a day. People from all over Europe streamed to his confessional in Ars to “experience the love and mercy of God.”

His is a great story  and example of faith and perseverance in seemingly difficult odds.  He was so slow to learn and no one thought he would ever be ordained, but the Holy Spirit had other ideas. He wound up being known by all who encountered him for his sanctity, cheerfulness and mercy.

The Icon which accompanies his heart
As Catholics today struggle to find meaning in the crises with priests in the Church, I would recommend reading about this holy priest, who himself lived through turbulent times in  France and in the Church, yet in his humility and holiness, he gave comfort to many thousands of souls.

St. John Vianney certainly gives the example of what the heart of a priest should be!. The significance and beauty of his life is to be found in his simple witness of being a faithful and loving parish priest who had a deep love of the Eucharist.


MOTHER OF ALL PRIESTS

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In May of 2010 Pope Benedict XVI dedicated himself and all priests to  the Blessed Mother, Mother of all priests, at Fatima.  Here in part is his prayer which we pray especially at this time:

Our Lady of Ransom ( Francisco de Zubaran- Spain 1629)

Bride of the Holy Spirit, obtain for us the inestimable gift of transformation in Christ. Through the same power of the Spirit that overshadowed you, making you the Mother of the Savior, help us to bring Christ your Son to birth in ourselves too. May the Church be thus renewed by priests who are holy, priests transfigured by the grace of Him who makes all things new.

Mother of Mercy, it was your Son Jesus who called us to become like Him: light of the world and salt of the earth.

Help us, through your powerful intercession, never to fall short of this sublime vocation, nor to give way to our selfishness, to the allurements of the world and to the wiles of the Evil One.

Preserve us with your purity, guard us with your humility and enfold us with your maternal love that is reflected in so many souls consecrated to you, who have become for us true spiritual mothers.

Mother of the Church, we priests want to be pastors who do not feed themselves but rather give themselves to God for their brethren, finding their happiness in this. Not only with words, but with our lives, we want to repeat humbly, day after day, our “here I am.”

Guided by you, we want to be Apostles of Divine Mercy, glad to celebrate every day the Holy Sacrifice of the Altar and to offer to those who request it the sacrament of Reconciliation.

Advocate and Mediatrix of grace, you who are fully immersed in the one universal mediation of Christ, invoke upon us, from God, a heart completely renewed that loves God with all its strength and serves mankind as you did…


Mother of Mercy
Our Mother for all time, do not tire of “visiting us”, consoling us, sustaining us.  Come to our aid and deliver us from every danger that threatens us.  With this act of entrustment and consecration, we wish to welcome you more deeply, more radically, for ever and totally into our human and priestly lives.

Let your presence cause new blooms to burst forth in the desert of our loneliness, let it cause the sun to shine on our darkness, let it restore calm after the tempest, so that all mankind shall see the salvation of the Lord, who has the name and the face of Jesus, who is reflected in our hearts, for ever united to yours!  Amen

PRIESTS IN THE MODERN WORLD

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In the late 1970s  Servant of God John A. Harden , SJ  (See Blog. 1/ 30 / 2018)  gave a homily at the Vatican entitled  The Holy Eucharist and Holiness in Priests”, which fits where we are in the Church today, 40 years later.



“No one familiar with the present age has any doubt that the Church has been going through a grave crisis for over a century. Some consider it the gravest in the Church’s history and certainly its impact on the Church and her institutions has been drastic in the extreme…

Among the Church’s institutions, the priesthood has been especially vulnerable. This may be partly explained by the fact that priests are the Church’s divinely established leaders of faith and morals, but mainly by the strategy of the evil spirit, who could be expected to intrude himself into the ranks of Christ’s chosen ones. For even as the Church’s greatest pride is in the sanctity of her ordained bishops and priests who lead the people of God in the paths of holiness, so they have been the Church’s greatest sorrow when they abandoned their high calling and turned their backs on the Savior who ordained them.

The modern popes have been eloquent in stressing the grave need of a strong priesthood to resist the pressure against the faith in our times. Leo XIII and Pius X, Benedict XV and Pius XI, Pius XII and John XXIII have pleaded time and again with bishops and priests to resist the seductions of a godless world and remain firm in their loyalty to Christ and His Church. No one could be clearer than Paul VI when, on the occasion of ordaining ten priests to the episcopate, he urged them to remain constant in their faith. “It is the gift of Christ to His Church,” he said. “It is the virtue that the Church needs today, assailed as she is by so many forces that aim at defeating her, indeed weakening and destroying her firmness in faith.” It is faith, he told the newly ordained prelates, “that must protect us from our inner weakness and against the growing confusion of ideas of our world.”

HOLY PRIESTS IN THE MIDST OF CRISES

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“What then is the greatest single need in the priesthood today? It is holiness. What the Church and the world mainly need is holy priests. The next question is the hard one: How are priests to become holy? They are to become holy through the Eucharist. In other words, there is no holiness without the Eucharist.

What the Church most needs in modern times is priests who have not been seduced by the ways of the world but have remained firm in their faith as ambassadors of Christ, chosen by Him to dispense the mysteries of salvation until the end of time. Only holy priests will not be seduced by the devil, who is the prince of this world. Jesus Christ in the Eucharist is the only one who can make priests truly holy.

Artist Svitozar Nenyuk

Holy priests will sanctify the faithful. One of the glories of the Second Vatican Council was its outspoken insistence not only that holiness is a realistic goal, but that this is our special vocation as Christians. “All of Christ’s faithful,” we are told, “no matter what their rank or station, have a vocation to the fullness of the Christian life and the perfection of charity.” In a word, we have all been called to become saints. But the sanctification of the world depends on the sanctity of Catholic bishops and priests. In God’s providence, we are to be the principal channels of holiness to the world in which we live.

There can be no ordinary Catholic priests today, not with the revolution through which society is passing and the convulsion in the Church on every level. The Church today needs strong Catholic priests, wise Catholic priests, priests who are not swayed by public opinion or afraid to stand up for the truth. She needs priests who are willing to suffer for their convictions and, if need be, shed their blood for the faith...

Where, we ask, can they obtain this strength and wisdom, this patience and conviction and this loyal love of God that is faithful unto death? They can obtain it from the one who said, “Have courage, I have overcome the world.” He is not two thousand years away, or absent from the earth in a distant heaven that cannot be spanned. No, He is right here in the Eucharist. And He wants nothing more than that we also be with Him as much as we can. If we are, and the more we are – as the great Eucharistic saints tell us – He will not only make us holy, but He will use us priests as He used the Apostles, who, when He first made the promise of the Eucharist, did not walk away. He will use us as channels of His grace even to the ends of the earth and until the end of time.”
                                                                                                               Father John Harden, SJ,  1979

ONLY THE EUCHARIST

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“Priests have no choice. The psychological pressure from the world, the flesh and the devil is too strong to cope with by themselves. The Holy Eucharist must remain, if it already is, or become, if it is not, the mainstay of their priestly lives. This is no option. It is a law of spiritual survival in every age, and with thunderous emphasis, for Catholic priests in our day.


 No doubt the Eucharistic faith and devotion of priests are crucially important in the priestly apostolate. “Like priest, like people” is a truism of the Church’s history. But “like Eucharist, like priest” is also a sobering fact of the Church’s biography.

Priests are as selfless and chaste, as sacrificing and humble, as their lives are centered on the Eucharist. The daily and devout offering of Mass, the daily Holy Hour and frequent Benediction, the frequent visits to the Blessed Sacrament – these are not superficial priestly devotions. They are expressions of a profound love for Jesus Christ, now living and offering Himself for our sanctification on earth on our way to eternity...

   I make bold to say that the single most important need for Catholic priests is a renewed faith in the Holy Eucharist…  Would anyone doubt that in our nation in the last decade of the twentieth century, we need an avalanche of moral miracles to protect the priesthood and the priestly apostolate from the demonic forces let loose in our country today?


Only God can work a miracle, and we need to change the figure - an ocean of miracles in America, and in Canada, as in England, France, Germany, and Scandinavia, to mention just a few materially wealthy countries that are in desperate need of divine grace where so many are walking in darkness and the shadow of eternal death.
Jesus Christ is the infinite God Who became man. He became man not only to die for us on Calvary. He became man to live with us in the Holy Eucharist.

His divine power is accessible in the Holy Eucharist to those, beginning with priests, who have the humility to believe.                                            
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                  Father John Harden, SJ


PRAYER FOR OUR PRIESTS

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I would like to address myself to the subject of the value of prayer and sacrifice for priests – the value of prayer and sacrifice for priests. If there was ever a need to pray and sacrifice for priests for their preservation and sanctity it is today. It is not exaggeration to say that the Catholic priesthood in countries like our own is going through the most difficult ordeal in the Church's history. That is no exaggeration. 


Norman Rockwell, 1943


Today, perhaps more than ever, priests need our prayers. Many churches are close to empty; priests are mocked and ridiculed by the media and by countless individuals; many Catholics dissent from the Church’s teaching; and there is a tidal wave of liberal theology and modernism that has infiltrated our seminaries. These are just some of the difficulties facing priests today.


Priests have a sublime vocation. They are called to be “other Christs” in a very special way. Without them, there would be no Sacraments, which are for the faithful, a perpetual source of grace, hope and sanctity.


                                                                       (written  40 years ago  by John Harden, SJ)

PRIESTS IN NEED

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Miguel Jeronimo Zendejas

O my beloved Jesus,
I bring Thee the poverty of Thy priests, that Thou wouldst enrich them.
I bring Thee the emptiness of Thy priests, that Thou wouldst fill them.
I bring Thee the coldness of Thy priests, that Thou wouldst warm them.
I bring Thee the loneliness of Thy priests, that Thou wouldst embrace them.
I bring Thee the sorrows of Thy priests, that Thou wouldst console them.
I bring Thee the illnesses of Thy priests, that Thou wouldst heal them.
I bring Thee the impurities of Thy priests, that Thou wouldst wash them clean.
I bring Thee the nakedness of Thy priests, that Thou wouldst clothe them.
I bring Thee the silence of Thy priests, that Thou wouldst speak to them.
I bring Thee the brokenness of Thy priests, that Thou wouldst repair them.
I bring Thee the infirmities of Thy priests, that Thou wouldst heal them.
I bring Thee the nothingness of Thy priests that Thou wouldst be their all.
I bring Thee the darkness of Thy priests, that Thou wouldst illuminate them,
I bring Thee the bitterness of Thy priests, that Thou wouldst give them to taste of                                                Thy sweetness.
I bring Thee the struggles of Thy priests, that Thou wouldst be victorious in them.
I give Thee the blindness of Thy priests that Thou wouldst give them clear vision.
I bring Thee the weariness of Thy priests that Thou wouldst be their rest.
I bring Thee the thirst of Thy priests that Thou wouldst quench it.
I bring Thee the fears of Thy priests that Thou wouldst give them confidence.
I give thee Thee the doubts of Thy priests that Thou wouldst strengthen their faith.
I bring Thee the despondency of Thy priests that Thou wouldst infuse them with                                                  hope.
I bring Thee the sadness of Thy priests that Thou wouldst be their joy.
I bring Thee all Thy priests, especially those in their last agony, those who are locked in 

spiritual combat, and those being tempted to sin against faith and against hope.
I bring Thee the death of Thy priests that Thou wouldst be their life eternal.
I bring Thee all those priest of Thine for whom Thy presence in the Most Holy Sacrament  
has  become a  matter of indifference, of routine, and of neglect.

Beloved Lord Jesus, have mercy on those priests of Thine whose minds have grown dark, whose hearts have grown cold, and who have succumbed to the enticements of the world, the weariness of the flesh, and the deceits of the devil. Deliver them all, O Jesus, for they are Thine, and Thou wilt not deny Thine own.



                                                                            Prayer from Silverstream Priory (Meath, Ireland)

FORGIVENESS

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With the crises in our Church whereby so many priests and Bishops  have failed to uphold their sacred duty to act as Christ to their people, there is great emphasis on the wounded, suffering victims of the sins by priests against them.  But I feel we also need to remember the priests themselves  who have grievously sinned- how will they be saved?  Only by our prayers and their remorse, begging forgiveness of their victims, of the whole Church and of the Lord whom they have betrayed.

“Save all  Your priests, O Jesus,
for they are  Your chosen friends,
and each one is precious in Your sight,
even when he has fallen into the worst sins against You,
harming souls, and bringing sorrow and shame upon Your Church.
Save them all! Let not one of Your beloved priests be lost,
that Your Church may say in all truth, and with a holy joy:
"To me, O God, Your friends are made exceedingly honorable."
Amen.
                                    (In Sinu Jesu)

PRIESTS INVITED TO KNOCK

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I have had several emails from a woman who is the great, great (and maybe more greats) grandniece of Venerable Archdeacon Bartholomew Cavanagh the curate at the time of the apparition at Knock in Ireland.  She first wrote to ask if I had heard of Knock-  well, what Catholic goes to Ireland without seeing Knock?




More on  the curate later.  For now my main concern is priests during this time of Lent- so I borrow from Prior Mark Kirby of Silverstream in Meath, Ireland, who yearly makes the pilgrimage to pray at Knock. Who better to understand the plight of priests in our Church today, than one who has dedicated his life for the salvation of priests.

“It seems to me that Our Lady desires that Knock should become a place of pilgrimage for priests. A dimension of Knock, not yet fully developed, is that it must become a place of healing for priests, a place where Mary can restore them to purity and to holiness of life by drawing them into her company. Knock invites all priests to share their lives with Mary by opening their homes and their hearts to her, and by living every moment in her presence.

Just as Saint John, obeying the word of Jesus from the Cross, took Mary into his home, so too must every priest shelter her in the space that is most personal to him. The gift of sacred intimacy with the Blessed Virgin Mary, suggested by the apparition at Knock, may well be among the heavenly secrets reserved by her for this time of trial for the Church...


She would have her priest sons wash themselves in the Blood of the Lamb, and unite themselves to her Son, Priest and Victim, in the mystery of His Sacrifice. Yes, Knock is for all people, but I believe that it was, from the beginning, destined to be a place of healing and of abundant graces for priests...

Knock invites priests to remain in adoration before Mary's Son, the Lamb Who was slain. Knock invites priests to wash themselves in His Precious Blood by seeking absolution from all their sins. Knock invites priests to follow Saint Joseph and Saint John by consecrating themselves to Mary as Virgin Bride and Mother."

May 2012


CHRIST'S SPECIALISTS

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I am meeting you, priests called by Christ to serve him in the new millennium. You have been chosen from among the people, appointed to act in relation to God, to offer gifts and sacrifices for sins. Believe in the power of your priesthood! By virtue of the sacrament, you have received all that you are. When you utter the words "I" and "my" ("I absolve you ... This is my body ..."), you do it not in your own name, but in the name of Christ, "in persona Christi", who wants to use your lips and your hands, your spirit of sacrifice and your talent.


At the moment of your ordination, through the liturgical sign of the imposition of hands, Christ took you under his special protection; you are concealed under His hands and in His Heart. Immerse yourselves in His love, and give Him your love! When your hands were anointed with oil, the sign of the Holy Spirit, they were destined to serve the Lord as His own hands in today’s world. They can no longer serve selfish purposes, but must continue in the world the witness of His love…

The faithful expect only one thing from priests: that they be specialists in promoting the encounter between man and God. The priest is not asked to be an expert in economics, construction or politics. He is expected to be an expert in the spiritual life...  For this to happen, priests need to be trusting in Divine Mercy…

If you live by faith, the Holy Spirit will suggest to you what you must say and how you must serve. You will always be able to count on the help of her who goes before the Church in faith. I exhort you to call upon her always in words that you know well: "We are close to you, we remember you, we watch."

PASTORAL VISIT  OF HIS HOLINESS POPE BENEDICT XVI
                                                             Warsaw Cathedral, 25 May 2006

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