Thought for the day:

"Give me grace to amend my life, and to have an eye to mine end, without grudge of death, which to them that die in thee,
good Lord, is the gate of a wealthy life."
St. Thomas More

THREE THINGS

"Three things are necessary for the salvation of man; to know what he ought to believe; to know what he ought to desire; and to know what he ought to do."
St. Thomas Aquinas

Rights of Man?

"The people have heard quite enough about what are called the 'rights of man'. Let them hear about the rights of God for once". Pope Leo XIII Tamesti future, Encyclical

Eternity

All souls owe their eternity to Jesus Christ. Unfortunately, many have turned their back to him.


Saturday, June 30, 2018

Commemoration of St. Paul

Even though yesterday was the day for Sts. Peter and Paul, it most was about St. Peter.
Today is the day we think about and honor St. Paul in his travels throughout the Jewish areas, the Grecian area, and the Roman area. He converted many in all of these places. (One thing came to mind when writing this, and it concerned a friend of mind whose son was in the protestant 'ministry'. He had gone to Israel to supposedly learn Hebrew so he could read the letters written by Paul in their original language. I told my friend that those letters were written in Greek, because, why would anyone write to someone in Greece in the Hebrew language? He disagreed. I told him to look at a map of the middle East and eastern Europe and see that the cities that Paul went to and wrote to were mostly in Greece. Facts surely confuse protestants.) ANYWAY:


Commemoration of St. Paul (June 30)

Whereas the Greeks on this day are uniting in one solemnity the memory, as they express it, "of the illustrious Saints, the Twelve Apostles, worthy of all praise," let us follow in spirit the Roman people of former times, who would gather around the Successor of St. Peter and make the splendid Basilica of the Ostian Way—St. Paul outside the Walls—re-echo with songs of victory, while he offered to the Doctor of the Gentiles the grateful homage of the city and of the world.

On the 25th of January we beheld St. Stephen leading to Christ's Crib Saul, the once ravenous wolf of Benjamin (Gen. 49: 27), tamed at last, but who in the morning of his impetuous youth had filled the Church of God with tears and bloodshed. His evening did indeed come when, as Jacob had foreseen, Saul, the persecutor, would outstrip all his predecessors among Christ's disciples in giving increase to the fold, and in feeding the flock with the choicest food of his heavenly doctrine.

By an unexampled privilege, Our Lord, though already seated at the right hand of His Father, vouchsafed not only to call, but personally to instruct this new disciple, so that he might one day be numbered amongst His Apostles. The ways of God can never be contradictory one to another; hence this creation of a new Apostle may not be accomplished in a manner derogatory to the divine constitution already delivered to the Christian Church by the Son of God. Therefore, as soon as the illustrious convert emerged from those sublime contemplations during which the Christian dogma had been poured into his soul, he went to Jerusalem to see St. Peter, as he himself relates to his disciples in Galatia. "It behooved him," says Bossuet, "to collate his own Gospel with that of the Prince of the Apostles" (Sermon on Unity). From that moment, aggregated as a co-operator in the preaching of the Gospel, the Acts of the Apostles describes him at Antioch accompanied by St. Barnabas, presenting himself to the work of opening the Church to the Gentiles, the conversion of Cornelius having been already effected by St. Peter himself. He passes a whole year in this city, reaping an abundant harvest. After St. Peter's imprisonment in Jerusalem, at his subsequent departure for Rome, a warning from on high makes known to those who preside over the Church at Antioch, that the moment has come for them to impose hands on the two missionaries, and confer on them the sacred character of Ordination and Consecration.

From that hour St. Paul attains the full power of an Apostle, and it is clear that the mission for which he has been preparing is now opened. At the same time, in St. Luke's narrative, St. Barnabas almost disappears, retaining but a very secondary position. The new Apostle has his own disciples, and he henceforth takes the lead in a long series of pilgrimages marked by as many conquests. His first is to Cyprus, where he seals an alliance with ancient Rome, analogous to that which St. Peter contracted at Caesarea.

St. Paul before Sergius Paulus

The Latin inscription reads: "Sergius Paulus, Proconsul of Asia, embraced the Christian Faith at the preaching of St. Paul."

In the year 43, when St. Paul landed in Cyprus, its proconsul was Sergius Paulus, illustrious for his ancestry, but still more so for the wisdom of his government. He wished to hear Sts. Paul and Barnabas: a miracle worked by St. Paul, under his very eyes, convinced him of the truth of his teaching; and the Christian Church counted that day among Her sons one who was heir to the proudest name among the noble families of Rome. Touching was the mutual exchange that took place on this occasion. The Roman patrician had just been freed by the Jew from the yoke of the Gentiles; in return, the Jew hitherto called Saul received and thenceforth adopted the name of Paul, as a trophy worthy of the Apostle of the Gentiles.

From Cyprus St. Paul travelled successively to Cilicia, Pamphylia, Pisidia, and Lycaonia, everywhere preaching the Gospel and founding churches. He then returned to Antioch in the year 47, and found the Church there in a state of violent agitation. A party of Jews, who had been converted to Christianity from the ranks of the Pharisees, whilst consenting indeed to the admission of Gentiles into the Church, were maintaining that this could only be on condition of their being likewise subjected to Mosaic practices, such as circumcision and the distinction of forbidden foods. The Christians who had been received from among the Gentiles were disgusted at this servitude to which St. Peter had not subjected them; and the controversy became so hot that St. Paul deemed it necessary to undertake a journey to Jerusalem, where St. Peter had lately arrived, a fugitive from Rome, and where the Apostolic College was at that moment further represented by St. John, as well as by St. James, the Bishop of that city. These being assembled to deliberate on the question, it was decreed, in the name and under the influence of the Holy Ghost, that to exact any observance relative to Jewish rites should be utterly forbidden in the case of Gentile converts. It was on this occasion, too, that St. Paul received from these Pillars, as he styles them, the confirmation of his apostolate superadded to that of the Twelve, and to be specially exercised in favor of the Gentiles. By this extraordinary ministry deputed to the nations, the Christian Church definitively asserted Her independence of Judaism, and the Gentiles could now freely come flocking into Her bosom.

St. Paul then resumed his course of apostolic journeys over all the provinces he had already evangelized, in order to confirm the Churches. Thence, passing through Phrygia, he came to Macedonia, stayed a while at Athens, and then on to Corinth, where he remained a year and a half. At his departure he left in this city a flourishing Church, whereby he excited against himself the fury of the Jews. From Corinth St. Paul went to Ephesus, where he stayed two years. So great was his success with the Gentiles there, that the worship of Diana was materially weakened (and the early converts burned their evil books—Acts 19: 19); whereupon a tumult ensuing, St. Paul thought the moment had come for his departure from Ephesus. During his abode there he made known to his disciples a thought that had long haunted him: "I must needs see Rome." The capital of the Gentile world was indeed calling the Apostle of the Gentiles.

The rapid growth of Christianity in the capital of the empire had brought face to face, in a manner more striking than elsewhere, the two heterogeneous elements which formed the Church of that day: the unity of Faith held together in one fold those that had formerly been Jews, and those that had been pagans. It so happened that some of both of these classes, too easily forgetting the gratuity of their common vocation to the Faith, began to go so far as to despise their brethren of the opposite class, deeming them less worthy than themselves of that Baptism which had made them all equal in Christ. On the one side, certain Jews disdained the Gentiles, remembering the polytheism which had sullied their past life with all those vices which came in its train. On the other side, certain Gentiles contemned the Jews, as coming from an ungrateful and blind people, who had so abused the favors lavished upon them by God as to crucify the Messias.

In the year 53, St. Paul, already aware of these debates, profited by a second journey to Corinth to write to the faithful of the Church in Rome that famous Epistle in which he emphatically sets forth how gratuitous is the gift of Faith; and maintains how Jew and Gentile alike being quite unworthy of the divine adoption, have been called solely by an act of pure mercy. He likewise shows how Jew and Gentile, forgetting the past, have but to embrace one another in the fraternity of the same Faith, thus testifying their gratitude to God through whom both of them have been alike prevented by grace. His apostolic dignity, so fully recognized, authorized St. Paul to interfere in this matter, though touching a Christian center not founded by him.

Whilst awaiting the day when he could behold with his own eyes the Queen of all Churches, lately fixed by St. Peter on the Seven Hills of Rome, the Apostle was once again anxious to make a pilgrimage to the City of David. Jewish rage was just at that moment rampant in Jerusalem against him; national pride being more specially piqued, in that he, the former disciple of Gamaliel, the accomplice of St. Stephen’s murder, should now invite the Gentiles to be coupled with the sons of Abraham, under the one same Law of Jesus of Nazareth. The tribune Lysias was scarce able to snatch him from the hands of these blood-thirsty men, ready to tear him to pieces. The following night, Christ appeared to St. Paul, saying to him: Be constant, for as thou hast testified of Me in Jerusalem, so must thou bear witness also at Rome.

It was not however, till after two years of captivity, that St. Paul, having appealed to Caesar, landed at Italy at the beginning of the year 56. Then at last the Apostle of the Gentiles made his entry into Rome: the trappings of a victor surrounded him not; he was but a humble Jewish prisoner led to the place where all appellants to Caesar were mustered; yet was he that Jew whom Christ Himself had conquered on the way to Damascus. No longer Saul, the Benjamite, he now presented himself under the Roman name of Paul; nor was this a robbery on his part, for after St. Peter, he was to be the second glory of Rome, the second pledge of her immortality. He brought not the Primacy with him indeed, as St. Peter had done, for that had been committed by Christ to one alone; but he came to assert in the very center of the Gentile world, the divine delegation which he had received in favor of the nations, just as an affluent flows into the main stream, which mingling its waters with its own, at last empties them united into the ocean. St. Paul was to have no successor in his extraordinary mission; but the element which he had deposited in Mother Church was of such value, that in the course of ages the Roman Pontiffs, heirs to St. Peter's monarchical power, have ever appealed to St. Paul's memory as well; pronouncing their mandates in the united names of the "Blessed Apostles Peter and Paul."

Instead of having to await in prison the day wherein his cause was to be heard, St. Paul was at liberty to choose a lodging place in the city. He was obliged, however, to be accompanied day and night by a soldier to whom, according to the usual custom, he was chained, but only in such a way as to prevent his escape; all his movements being otherwise left perfectly free, he could easily continue to preach the word of God. Towards the close of the year 57, in virtue of his appeal to Caesar, the Apostle was at last summoned to the praetorium; and the successful pleading of his cause resulted in his acquittal.

Being now free, St. Paul revisited the East, confirming on his Evangelical course the Churches he had previously founded. Thus Ephesus and Crete once more enjoyed his presence; in the one he left his disciple St. Timothy as Bishop, and in the other St. Titus. But St. Paul had not left Rome forever; marvelously illumined as she had been by his preaching, the Roman Church was yet to be gilded by his parting rays and empurpled with his blood. A heavenly warning, as in St. Peter's case, bade him also return to Rome where martyrdom was awaiting him. This fact is attested by St. Athanasius. We learn the same from St. Asterius of Amesius, who hereupon remarks that the Apostle entered Rome once more, "in order to teach the very masters of the world; and by their means to wrestle with the whole human race. There St. Paul found St. Peter engaged in the same work; he at once yoked himself to the same divine chariot with him, and set about instructing the children of the Law within the Synagogues, and the Gentiles outside."

At length Rome possessed her two Princes conjointly: the one seated on the eternal chair, holding in his hands the keys of the Kingdom of Heaven; the other surrounded by the sheaves he has garnered from the fields of the Gentile world. They would part no more; even in death, as the Church sings, they would not be separated. The period of their being together was necessarily short, for they must needs render to their divine Master the testimony of blood before the Roman world should be freed from the odious tyranny under which it was groaning. Their death was to be Nero's last crime; after that he was to fade from sight, leaving the world horror-stricken at his end, as shameful as it was tragic.

It was in the year 65 that St. Paul returned to Rome; once more signalizing his presence there by the manifold works of his apostolate. From the time of his first labors there, he had made converts even in the very palace of the Caesars: being now returned to this former theater of his zeal, he again found entrance into the imperial abode. A woman who was living in criminal intercourse with Nero, as likewise a cup-bearer of his, were both caught in the apostolic net, for it was hard indeed to resist the power of that mighty word. Nero, enraged at "this foreigner's" influence in his very household, was bent on St. Paul's destruction. Being first of all cast into prison, his zeal cooled not, but he persisted the more in preaching Jesus Christ. The two converts of the imperial palace having abjured, together with paganism, the manner of life they had been leading, this twofold conversion of theirs only hastened St. Paul's martyrdom. He was well aware that it would be so, as can be seen in these lines addressed to St. Timothy: "I labor even unto bonds as an evil-doer; but the word of God is not bound. Therefore I endure all things for the sake of the elect. For I am even now ready to be sacrificed, and the time of my dissolution is at hand. I have fought the good fight, I have finished my course, I have kept the Faith. (This last sentence is what will be on my wife's and my tombstone when we die.  Seems appropriate to us)  As to the rest, there is laid up for me a crown of justice, which the Lord, the Just Judge, will render to me in that day." (2 Tim.)

Martyrdom of St. Paul on the 29th day of June, in the year 67, while St. Peter, having crossed the Tiber by the Triumphal bridge, was drawing nigh to the cross prepared for him on the Vatican plain, another martyrdom was being consummated on the left bank of the same river. St. Paul, as he was led along the Ostian Way, was also followed by a group of the faithful who mingled with the escort of the condemned. His sentence was that he should be beheaded at the Salvian Waters. A march of two miles brought the soldiers to a path leading eastwards, by which they led their prisoner to the place fixed upon for the martyrdom of this, the Doctor of the Gentiles. St. Paul fell on his knees, addressing his last prayer to God; then having bandaged his eyes, he awaited the death-stroke. A soldier brandished his sword, and the Apostle's head, as it was severed from the trunk, made three bounds along the ground; three fountains immediately sprang up on these spots. Such is the local tradition; and to this day, three fountains are to be seen on the site of his martyrdom, over each of which an altar is raised.


As soon as St. Paul recognized the wickedness he had committed in persecuting the Christians, and understood the divine will by a heavenly vision and by the instructions of St. Ananias, he converted himself unhesitatingly to God, and, soon after, commenced to preach fearlessly the same faith he had before so cruelly persecuted. The remaining 34 years of his life he employed zealously in the service of the Almighty and made more than sufficient amends for his past offences. He was not satisfied that he himself had become a Christian, and that he served God, but he endeavored to convert others, as well Jews as heathens, to Christianity, and to lead them to a holy life by verbal and written instructions. How great a work he had taken upon himself, and what dangers and persecutions he had to endure on account of it, may be partly seen in his Epistles.


Prayer from the Gallican Missal:


O God, who, by a voice from heaven, didst strike with terror thine Apostle Paul when raging against the holiness of the Christian Religion, and, on this the day of his Vocation, didst change him both in his heart and his name: and him, whom the Church once dreaded as her persecutor, she now rejoices in having as her Teacher in the commandments of God: whom, also, thou didst strike with exterior blindness, that thou mightest give him interior sight: to whom, moreover, when the darkness of his cruelty was removed, thou didst give the knowledge of thy divine law, whereby he might call the Gentiles: and didst thrice deliver him from shipwreck, which he suffered for the Faith, saving this thy devoted servant from the waves of the sea: grant also to us, we beseech thee, who are solemnizing both his conversion and his faith, that, after the blindness of our sins, we may be permitted to see Thee, in heaven, who didst enlighten Paul, here on earth. Amen




 When I converted to the Roman Catholic Faith in 1982, I took the name of Paul as my Patron saint, as I related to him in many ways. Hence, cleverly, so I thought, my name was now Jon/Paul, too. Now it doesn't seem so funny to me anymore, after seeing how things were changed, and NOT for the good, by him during his papacy (JPII).



Prayer to Paul as your Patron Saint (He is mine)

Saint Paul, whom I have chosen as my special patron, pray for me that I, too, may one day glorify the Blessed Trinity in heaven. Obtain for me your lively faith, that I may consider all persons, things, and events in the light of almighty God. Pray, that I may be generous in making sacrifices of temporal things to promote my eternal interests, as you so wisely did.

Set me on fire with a love for Jesus, that I may thirst for His sacraments and burn with zeal for the spread of His kingdom. By your powerful intercession, help me in the performance of my duties to God, myself and all the world.

Win for me the virtue of purity and a great confidence in the Blessed Virgin. Protect me this day, and every day of my life. Keep me from mortal sin. Obtain for me the grace of a happy death. Amen


Friday, June 29, 2018

Our Lady of Aradin

Following is just something I found, but Our Lady is desperately needed throughout the world, whether or not we choose to believe it.  A lot of people don't bother anymore.

NEW YORK 

A new shrine in New York is honoring Christians persecuted for their Faith.
The Shrine of Our Lady of Aradin, Mother of the Persecuted Church, opened at St. Michael the Archangel parish in Manhattan. It officially opened on Tuesday with the blessing and dedication of an icon of Our Lady of Aradin.

Father Benedict Kiely of Nasarean.org told Breitbart, "We are at a Lepanto moment in Western history." 

He continued, "We must pray with the same fervor that the Christians prayed then to save Western civilization, not just from the danger of radical Islamist extremism, but from radical, aggressive secular liberalism."

Father Kiely emphasized that the shrine would be a place to pray for persecuted Christians. He said, "Prayer for the Persecuted Church is a Christian duty."

He also told Breitbart, "The witness of persecuted Christians inspires us to speak the truth in love and to bear witness even to martyrdom in our society — in other words, have some guts to live the Faith."

 
Father Kiely and his organization work to help persecuted Christians in the Middle East. He is "a friend of the parish," according to St. Michael's pastor Fr. George Rutler.
Image
Our Lady of Aradin in the new shrine. The plaque beneath
says "Our Lady of Aradin, pray for persecuted Christians."
(Photo Credit: Kathryn Jean Lopez)

The image of Our Lady of Aradin, the focal point of the shrine, was produced by a Middle Eastern Christian who had to flee from ISIS.

It is painted with a gold background and has the words of the Hail Mary written out in Aramaic, the language spoken natively by Jesus Christ and His Apostles. Versions of Aramaic are still spoken today by Christians in some parts of the Middle East.

Father Rutler ( who I actually got to serve Mass for him in the early 90's), wrote in the June 3 edition of his weekly column, "As I write this, Fr. Kiely is in Mosul, Iraq, which has been almost totally destroyed and where only a few Christian families remain, after thousands have fled."

The parish pastor noted that this shrine for persecuted Christians is the first in the world and alluded to the fact that plans for a second shrine located somewhere else in the world are currently in the works.

He explained to parishioners:
Our church is fortunate to have the first shrine [of the two], with an icon of Our Lady of Aradin that has been donated to us in our important location in Manhattan. The icon depicts Mary in the traditional dress of an Iraqi bride. The border is written in Aramaic, the language of our Lord, which still is spoken in Qaraqosh, the home of the Iraqi Christian artist Mouthana Butres, who "wrote" the icon. Mr. Butres was driven from his home, along with all the Christians of Qaraqosh, by militant Muslims in August 2015, and he and his family now are refugees in Lebanon.
Father Rutler's column addressed the sacrificial nature of the Mass and contrasted the persecution of Christians in other parts of the world with Ireland's recent abortion vote. He wrote, "While bourgeois populations dance in the streets for legalized abortion and the blessing of perverse imitations of marriage, there still are Christians taking up the cross in foreign lands, and in ways that decadents prefer to ignore."

Sts. Peter/Paul



This is the day set aside to honor the holy Apostles Peter and Paul. We know that Peter is the head of the Church on earth; however, protestants seem to think that Paul should have been the first leader of the Church. They'll never get it; the Church had been in existence for many years before Paul showed up to persecute those pesky Christians, or Nazareans, or whatever the non-believers called them. After his conversion, it was still a long time before Paul even saw Peter. He knew that Peter was the head. He even had the audacity to rebuke Peter on his statements that only circumcised people could be saved. This was and is wrong, Peter recanted, and this problem was settled. (See, if Paul could rebuke the head of the Church, we should rebuke those, even leaders, who are wrong. Make sure you have the facts straight, though.) These two were martyred on the same day, the 29th of June, in Rome in the year 67A.D. Peter was crucified like Christ. However, since he didn't want to be crucified exactly like Christ, he asked his executioners to be placed upside down. He was. Paul, being a Roman citizen, was beheaded.   Paul, as he was led along the Ostian Way, was also followed by a group of the Faithful who mingled with the escort of the condemned. His sentence was that he should be beheaded at the Salvian Waters. A two miles' march brought the soldiers to a path leading eastwards, by which they led their prisoner to the place fixed upon for the martyrdom of this, the Doctor of the Gentiles. Paul fell on his knees, addressing his last prayer to God; then having bandaged his eyes, he awaited the death stroke. A soldier brandished his sword, and the Apostle's head, as it was severed from the trunk, made three bounds along the ground; three fountains immediately sprang up on these several spots. Such is the local tradition; and to this day, three fountains are to be seen on the site of his martyrdom, over each of which an altar is raised.

These two are the pillars of the early Church, and we should emulate them.


Saint Augustine of Hippo
Early Church Father & Doctor of the Church


Peter and Paul - June 29. This piece on Sts. Peter and Paul is an excerpt from a sermon (Sermo 295, 1-2, 4, 7-8; PL 38, 1348-1352) by St. Augustine, bishop of Hippo, who died in the year 430AD. It is used in the Roman Office of Readings for the Solemnity of Sts. Peter and Paul on June 29 and shows that as early as the fourth century, Christians celebrated this day in honor of these two apostles and martyrs who laid down their lives for Christ in the Eternal City.


'This day has been consecrated for us by the martyrdom of the blessed Apostles Peter and Paul. It is not some obscure martyrs we are talking about. "Their sound has gone out into all the earth, and their words to the ends of the world" (Psalm 19). These martyrs had seen what they proclaimed, they pursued justice by confessing the truth, by dying for the truth.


The blessed Peter, the first of the Apostles, the ardent lover of Christ, who was found worthy to hear, "And I say to you, that you are Peter" (Matthew 16:13-20). He himself, you see, had just said, "You are the Christ, the Son of the living God." Christ said to him, "And I say to you that you are Peter, and upon this rock I will build my Church." Upon this rock I will build the faith you have just confessed. Upon your words, "You are the Christ, the Son of the living God," I will build my Church; because you are Peter. Peter comes from petra, meaning a rock. Peter, Peter comes from the word for a rock in exactly the same way as the name Christian comes from Christ.


Before his passion the Lord Jesus, as you know, chose those disciples of his whom he called apostles. Among these it was only Peter who almost everywhere was given the privilege of representing the whole Church. It was in the person of the whole Church, which he alone represented, that he was privileged to hear, "To you will I give the keys of the kingdom of heaven." After all, it is not just one man that received these keys, but the Church in its unity. So this is the reason for Peter’s acknowledged pre-eminence, that he stood for the Church’s universality and unity, when he was told, "To you I am entrusting," what has in fact been entrusted to all. To show you that it is the Church which has received the keys of the kingdom of heaven, listen to what the Lord says in another place to all his apostles: "Receive the Holy Spirit"; and immediately afterwards: "Whose sins you forgive, they will be forgiven them; whose sins you retain, they will be retained" (John 20:22-23).


Quite rightly, too, did the Lord after his resurrection entrust his sheep to Peter to be fed (Jn. 21: 15-19). It is not, you see, that he alone among the disciples was fit to feed the Lord’s sheep; but when Christ speaks to one man, unity is being commended to us. And he first speaks to Peter, because Peter is the first among the apostles. Do not be sad, Apostle. Answer once, answer again, answer a third time. Let confession conquer three times with love, because self-assurance was conquered three times by fear. What you had bound three times must be loosed three times. Loose through love what you had bound through fear. And for all that, the Lord once, and again, and a third time, entrusted his sheep to Peter.


There is one day for the passion of two apostles. But these two also were as one; although they suffered in different ways, they were as one. Peter went first, Paul followed. We are celebrating a feast day, consecrated for us by the blood of the apostles. Let us love their Faith, their lives, their labors, their sufferings, their confession of faith, their preaching.'


When the time in Rome was all for killing these Christians, Peter's followers urged him to flee the city, at least for a while. According to St. Ambrose, Peter set out along the Appian Way. Just as he reached the Capuan gate, Christ suddenly appeared to him as if about to enter the city. 'Lord, whither goest thou?' cried out the Apostle. Christ replied: "to Rome, to be there crucified again." Peter understood his Master; he at once retracted his steps, having now no thought but to await his hour of martyrdom.

According to Abbot Gueranger, Peter started to set everything in order, because he now knew his time was short. He laid his hands on Clement, whose nobility of birth recommended him to the consideration of the Romans, while at the same time his zeal and learning merited the esteem of the faithful, was the one on whom the prince of the Apostles fixed his choice. Clement, then, is the first successor of Peter. His name is mentioned in Paul's letters, as well as in the Mass.

After the Church had been established for years, this was when Paul was converted; he went around and reaffirmed the Faith who had already been converted. Protestants don't know any history. They don't realize that the Church had been around way before Paul came along. He had been a persecutor of these same believers, so the Church must have already been established. DUH! Like all the saints say: 'if anyone were to read history and realize it, they would be streaming to Rome, where Christ's Church was and is today.'  (And ,by the way, to you protestants, whenever the Apostles are listed in Scripture, Peter's name is ALWAYS listed first.  But, however, in our Mass when the Apostles are listed, Paul's name is second.)

(But, they still do not bow to the Holy, Roman, Catholic, and Apostolic Church, because they think it is the whore of Babylon! IDIOTS! Hopefully they will find out and convert before they croak.)


The following hymn was written by a Sicilian woman named Elpis, concerning the two great Apostles, St. Peter and St. Paul. The last part is attributed to St. Paulinus of Aquileia, and added by St. Pius V:

Lo! beauteous light eternal floods with sacred fires this golden day, which crowns the princes of Apostles and opens out unto the guilty a free path to heaven.

The teacher of the whole earth, as well as the doorkeeper of heaven, both of them fathers of Rome and judges of nations, each a victor of death, the one by the sword, the other by the cross: laurel-crowned, both take their seats in the senate of eternal life.

O happy Rome, by noble gore of princes twain art thou now consecrated; empurpled by the blood of such as these, thou alone dost surpass in beauty all the rest of the earth.

To the Trinity in Unity that governeth all things through ages of ages, may there be eternal glory, honour, power, and jubilation. Amen.



Here's another prayer, dedicated to these great Saints, for help in times of trouble within the Church. We can surely use their help these days:

Defend, O Lord, thy servants, we beseech thee, from all dangers both of body and soul; and, by the intercession of the blessed and glorious Virgin Mary, Mother of God, of the blessed Apostles Peter and Paul, of blessed N., and of all thy saints, mercifully grant us the blessings of peace and safety ; that all adversities and errors being removed, thy Church may freely and securely serve thee; through Christ Our Lord. Amen.


Conclude to give praise and glory to God, for all the graces and glory bestowed upon these two princes and pillars of his Church. Study to learn the great lessons they taught, both by word and work. But especially learn of them the practice of divine love, nothing else can make us saints.

Thursday, June 28, 2018

Vigil of Sts. Peter and Paul

From our beloved Abbot Gueranger concerning these two:

John the Baptist, placed on the confines of the two Testaments, closes the prophetic age, the reign of hope, and opens the era of Faith which possesses the long-expected God, though as yet without beholding Him in His Divinity.  Thus even before the octave is ended wherein we pay homage to the son of Zachary, the confession of the Apostles is added to the Precursor's testimony to the Word the Light.  Tomorrow all heaven will re-echo with the solemn protestation first heard at Caesarea Philippe:  "Thou art Christ, the Son of the living God"; and Simon Bar-Jona, because of this oracle uttered by him, will be the chosen Rock, supporting the divine structure, the Church.  Tomorrow He will die, sealing this glorious declaration with His Blood; but He will yet live on, in the person of each Roman Pontiff, that he may thus guard this precious testimony in all its integrity, even to the day when Faith will give place to the eternal vision.  Coupled with Peter in his labours, the Doctor of the Gentiles shares his triumph this day; and Rome, more indebted to these two princes than to all the stout warriors of old, who laid the world prostrate at her feet, beholds their double victory fix forever upon her noble brow the diadem of spiritual royalty.

Let us, then, recollect ourselves, preparing our hearts in union with holy Church, by faithfully observing this vigil.  When the obligation of thus keeping up certain days of preparation previous to the festivals is strictly maintained by a people, it is a sign that Faith is still living amongst them; it proves that they understand the greatness of that which the holy liturgy proposes to their homage.  Christians in the West, we who make the glory of Saints Peter and Paul our boast, let us remember the Lent in honour of the Apostles begun by Greek schismatics on the close of the Paschal solemnities, and continued up to this day.  The contrast between them and ourselves will be of a nature to stir softness and ingratitude hold too large a share.  If certain concessions have, for grave reasons, been reluctlantly made by the Church, so that the fast of this vigil is not longer observed, let us see therein a double motive for holding fast to her precious Tradition.  Let us make up by fervor, thanksgiving and love, for the severity lacking in our observance, which is yet still maintained by so many Churches notwithstanding their schismatical separation from Rome.

The recital of the following beautiful formulas will help to inspire us with the spirit of the feast.  The first is taken from the Gothic-Gallic Missal:  it is the benediction which, according to the ancient rite used in France, was given to the people before the Communion on the feast of the Apostles.  The prayer which follows it is from the Leonine Sacramentary.


THE BENEDICTION


O God, Who to keep the members of thy Church from darkness, hast made to shine forth, like twin fountains of light, the tears of Peter and the writings of Paul, Amen.

In thy clemency, look upon thy people, O thou Who givest the heavens to be opened, by Peter with the key, and by Paul with the sword, Amen.

So that the leaders going first, thither may the flock at length come, whither have already arrived by one same step, both the Pastor by the gibbet, and the Teacher by the sword.  Through Our Lord, who livest with the Father and the Holy Ghost forever and ever.  Amen.


PRAYER

O almighty and eternal God, Who by an ineffable mystery hast fixed the right of Apostolic princedom on the proud summit of the name of Rome, whence evangelic truth may diffuse itself through all the earth:  grant that what by their preaching hath percolated through the whole world all may follow with Christian devotedness.

Grant to thy Church, we beseech Thee, O Lord, both worthily to rejoice at having such great princes, and to follow with loving devotion that teaching of theirs, whereby thy chosen flocks have been initiated into the sacred mysteries.  Through our Lord, who with the Father and Holy Ghost live and reign forever and ever.  Amen.



Wednesday, June 27, 2018

Our Lady of Perpetual Help

Tuesday, June 26, 2018

Sts. John and Paul, Martyrs

 


 



Today is the feast  day of Saints John and Paul.  Ora pro nobis.

These two Saints, not to be confused with the Apostles, were brothers and were officers of the Roman army in the days of Constantine the Great. They served in the house of Constance, daughter of Constantine, who was consecrated to God. Their virtues and services to her father rendered them very dear to her.  (They are listed in the 'Commemoration of the Saints' at the Traditional Mass)

With the aid of Constance, they practiced many works of charity and mercy, until the deaths of both Constantine and Constance. Then, at the accession of Julian the Apostate to the imperial throne, they resigned their position in the palace. Julian had returned to the cult of idols and was attempting to re-establish it in the empire. The brothers saw many wicked men prosper in their impiety.  They considered that worldly prosperity accompanied by impunity in sin is the most dreadful of all judgments, indicating reprobation. And history reveals how false and short-lived was the glittering prosperity of Julian.

While still in power the apostate attempted to win back John and Paul into active service. When he was refused, he gave them ten days to reconsider. The officer Terentianus, who at the end of that time brought to their house a little idol of Jupiter for their adoration, found them in prayer. In the middle of that night on June 26 they were decapitated secretly in their own garden.   The emperor feared their execution might cause a sedition in Rome. He instigated a rumor that they had been exiled.

The martyrs, by their renouncement of favors and their heroic resistance, purchased never-fading glory. Their house on the Caelian Hill became a magnificent Christian basilica by the end of the 4th/5th century.


House and Christian basilica on the Caelian Hill

In the second half of the fourth century, Byzantius, the Roman senator, and Saint Pammachius, his son, fashioned the house on the Caelian Hill into a Christian basilica and the tomb of John and Paul was venerated there from as early as the fifth century. The church was damaged during the sack of Rome by Alaric I (410) and because of an earthquake (442).  It was restored by Pope Paschal I (824), sacked again by the Normans (1084), and again restored, with the further building of a monastery and a bell tower.



Names in the Roman Canon and Sacramentarium Veronense

John and Paul’s early veneration is also indicated by the fact that the names of the two saints were inserted into the Roman Canon (First Eucharistic Prayer) of the Mass. Also the Sacramentarium Veronense, which dates back to Pope Leo the Great (440-461, indicates in the preface to the feast of the saints that they rested within the city walls.

Home to the Passionists and link with New York

Since 1773 the Basilica of St John and Paul has been home to the Passionist order and is the burial place of its founder St. Paul of the Cross.  Among previous cardinal priests of this church are two who became pope: Pope Honorius III (Cencio Savelli, elevated to cardinal in 1198) and Pope Pius XII (Eugenio Pacelli, elevated to cardinal in 1929).

Image above by: Giovanni Francesco Barbieri


If we have the opportunity to be Martyrs,
this is what awaits us.
 

Monday, June 25, 2018

BEWARE SPIDER!!!!!



Beware during this time of year. This post is not for the light-hearted! This is that time of the year when we are outside, working and playing. It is also the time of the year when the critters come out of wherever they have been hiding. Beware of some of them! The following is from someone who met up with one of these creatures. The results were not good.  (And, they have been spotted, once again in Michigan, because of the rather mild winter.  And, most of them get here hitching a ride on something, especially wood)
With their legs extended, they are about the size of an American quarter.




Very Important send out to everyone you know.  The following is by a man who came into contact with one of these critters:

'About 4 years ago I had a Doctor appointment. That morning they called and postponed it because our Dr. was in surgery. Two days later they called back and cancelled my appointment because our Doctor had died on the operating table. We thought that he was the one doing the operating. He had been bitten by a Brown Recluse spider. He had tried treating himself instead of getting help. He was fairly young (late 40’s) and the best Doctor we had ever had.'
Very sad.

Brown Recluse Spider . . ..
At this time of year, this is worth seeing.  They can be light to medium brown and have a body marking on their dorsal side that resembles a violin.
 
Most brown recluse spider bites will blister or itch.  In rare cases, the venom causes the flesh around the bite to die, or necrotize.  That can be life-threatening.

 Show these pictures to your spouse, your kids, grand kids, and friends. It could save their lives. Remember what this Spider looks like and be careful while cleaning, as told below.

It's summertime & cleanup is going on. Be careful where you put your hands. They like dark spaces & woodpiles.Also cool areas in the attic...................................This guy was bitten by a Brown Recluse spider.

Day 3:

 The following illustrates the progression of a brown recluse spider bite.
The affected skin actually dies on his body.

Day 5:
 
Some of the pictures towards the end are pretty nasty, but take a look at the last one -- it is a picture of the spider itself!

 The Brown Recluse Spider is the most dangerous spider that we have here in the USA.

 A person can die from it’s bite. We all should know what the spider looks like.

Day 10:
 
Send this around to people you love, because it is almost summer time.  (Whether or not you tell your enemies is up to you)

People will be digging around, doing yard work, spring cleaning, and sometimes in their attics. And, even cutting wood for the upcoming winter.


The Dangerous Brown Recluse Spider
 
Please be careful.
Spider bites are dangerous and can have permanent and highly negative consequences.  Along with the Black Widow spider, this one is just as poisonous and deadly.

They like the darkness and tend to live in storage sheds or attics or other areas that might not be frequented by people or light.

If you have a need to be in your attic, go up there and turn on a light and leave it on for about 30 minutes before you go in to do your work.

PLEASE PASS THIS ON TO YOUR RELATIVES AND FRIENDS!

St. William of Vercelli

St. William was born in 1085 at Vercelli in the Piedmont region of Italy of noble and wealthy parents. When he was still very young, he determined to renounce the world and become a hermit.
St. William of Vercelli
St. William of Vercelli,
hermit, Abbot, adviser to a King
He built his first hermit’s hut on Monte Solicoli, and then went to Monte Vergine. Many disciples came to him there, attracted by the sanctity of his life and many miracles he performed. Soon a community formed, of which he became the Abbot, and a church to Our Lady was built at the site. For this reason, the mountain became known as Monte Vergine [the Mount of the Virgin].

After a while, however, the monks began to complain that St. William’s rule was too strict and life too austere. He therefore decided to leave Monte Vergine. He went to Southern Italy and founded a new hermitage on Monte Laceno, then others at Basilicata, Conza, Guglietto, and Salerno. He also became an adviser to King Roger I of Naples. St. William died at Guglietto on June 25, 1142.

The first congregation of Monte Vergine dissolved. The monastery, however, remained and came into the hands of the religious of Our Lady of Monte Cassino, who wear the white habit of St. William to remember the founder of the monastery.


The Monastery of Monte Vergine

The Monastery of Monte Vergine today
The following extraordinary fact is recorded about the Monte Vergine monastery, where the monks still lead a life of penance and austerity. According to the rule, it is not permitted to eat meat, eggs, milk, or cheese. If someone tried to violate this regulation, storm clouds would appear in the sky and the lightning would destroy the illicit foodstuff that had been brought into the monastery.

Something similar was recorded at the Camaldula of St. Romualdo. If someone tried to bring food not permitted by the rule into the hermitage, it would quickly become corrupted and infested with worms.

This happened on many occasions, and always with the same result. It is the way God chose to show that He desires the traditions of penance and austerity of the great St. William, as well as St. Romualdo, to be maintained.

Comments of Prof. Plinio:

This selection shows how beautiful the Middle Ages was and the admirable harmonic contrasts it had.

In the Middle Ages the Catholic Church stimulated intellectual work in an extraordinary way, but she also encouraged manual labor, which is its harmonic contrary, the apparent opposite of intellectual work. The Church stimulated the strong and intense active life of society, but harmonically she also stimulated some religious families to retire from the active life, move to solitary places and live together praying and worshiping God. Further, she stimulated some souls to retire far from any human society and live completely alone. Doing this the Catholic Church maintained the eremitic vocation she gave birth to in the first centuries of her history.

mountain view from Monte Vergine

Harmonic constrasts: Above,Monte Vergine, the isolation of the hermitage. Below, Naples, the teeming life of activity of the city

Naples
There is a harmonic contrast in the teeming life of the medieval cities and the serenity of the meditative life of hermits, who think only on the things of God. These are just some examples of the many harmonic contraries of that blessed epoch, fruit of the Catholic spirit.

This harmony that existed in the Middle Ages as a consequence of the evangelization of the Church was a very important factor to maintain the psychological balance of men. Without the sanctity of the Catholic Church, this harmony would not be possible. If she were not authentic, she would stimulate either the eremitic vocation or the active life of the cities too much. Since the Catholic Church is true and holy, she stimulates the harmonic contrasts perfectly and produces a superb equilibrium of soul, which is a characteristic fruit of the Holy Church.

You have the example of this harmony of the Middle Ages in the life of the holy Abbot, St. William. He was a noble, and as such destined for a life of battles and court, a life of government and activity. He left behind everything and went to a completely isolated place to glorify Our Lady. He chose a mountain, probably to avoid the inopportune visits of the curious. It was a cold and austere place, yet he began a life of penance. Then an admirable thing happened that often occurs in the History of the Church. When souls isolate themselves solely for the love of God, they attract others. Other hermits gathered around him and formed a community.

You can imagine the scene. Along the road at the foot of the mountain groups of knights pass traveling and talking, then students begin singing and laughing, some pilgrims start praying. At the top of the mountain a large cross and a hermitage can be distinguished. One traveler asks another, “Who lives there?” The other answers, “It is William, the noble from Vercelli, who left everything for the love of God.”

How can this not be attractive? Who would not say – I want to stop and see William the noble. The news spreads. A man who needs help to resolve a problem goes to William, who prays for him and the problem is resolved. Soon everyone wants to go there to see him, pray and ask advice; some who go have the desire to stay. This explains the attraction he exerted and the disciples he made.

Then a tragic thing happened. He was the father of a religious family, but the disciples revolted against the rule he made. He became an inconvenience for them. He had to leave. He was virtually excluded from his own order. Those who had left everything to follow William now obliged William to leave them… So he started down the mountain, suffering but serene, praying.  He set out on an unknown road and began to walk south, step by step, mile after mile.

He arrived in Naples. You can imagine St. William arriving at the famous bay, seeing the volcano Vesuvius smoking, walking through the beautiful, animated Naples, passing by the busy port and seeing the prestigious palace of the King of Naples, one of the most powerful men of the Italian Peninsula. Naples was a center of culture and civilization with a brilliant court, a center of good taste. The selection doesn’t say how, but news of the presence of St. William reached the ears of the Monarch. He contacted St. William and his life changed. St. William became his counselor. With the same tranquility he had as Abbot of Monte Vergine, and that he conserved as a pilgrim, he maintained as a counselor to a King. William became the Angel of the Kingdom of Naples.

Chapel in Monte Virgine Monastery

The Chapel dedicated to Our Lady in the Monastery of Monte Vergine
After his death, the institution he founded disappeared, and the monastery was given to the Benedictines of Monte Cassino. As you know, the Benedictines wear black habits. The Benedictine monks of Monte Vergine honored St. William by wearing the white habit of the order he founded. It is a beautiful manifestation of love for tradition and a prayer that the order of St. William be restored.

We also have a manifestation of God’s protection for the monastery and His approval of its rigorous rule. He destroyed by lightning the foodstuff that was not permitted by the rule. But there is something more to consider. If God was so severe in destroying a piece of cheese brought in against the rule, with how much greater reason would He punish the liberal monks who were trying to relax the rule. And if those monks were not punished during their lifetimes, they should fear the chastisement after death.

We can retain three pictures of St. William’s life: First, the hermit praying alone on the mountain, attracting disciples, and building his monastery; second, the abbot being virtually excluded from his own order and monastery; third, the saint as counselor of the King of Naples.

In each of these facets of his life, there is something we can ask from him. We can ask him to grant us his spirit of recollection that gave such great fruit; his extraordinary confidence in Divine Providence even when he was excluded from the order he founded; his wisdom and humility when he became the adviser to a King.