10 Catholic Things that Caught My Eye Today (Feb. 8, 2016)

10 Catholic Things that Caught My Eye Today (Feb. 8, 2016) February 8, 2016

1. A good man in my inbox sent this wake-up call of an email a little while ago:

In the Gospel for today’s Mass (Mark6:53-56) we are told that when Jesus and his disciples landed at Gennesaret people immediately recognized Him and “They scurried about the surrounding country…” to bring the sick so they might touch His cloak and be healed.

The “scurried about the surrounding country” caught my attention. Because Jesus was there people spread out to gather and bring the sick and others just so they might touch the cloak and be healed. They had to be proactive to get to Jesus in the hope of the blessings He might present to them.

Hum, there were about 30 people at Mass at St. Teresa’s in Phoenix this morning – – no scurrying required. Jesus was there present in the Eucharist – readily and easily available to hundreds, maybe thousands more to heal souls and share their life, hopes and fears. Am I missing something? Do our brothers and sisters in faith genuinely realize – appreciate — God is available to us each and every day and there is no requirement to scurry around to find him. Do I really – genuinely – internalize and appreciate the gift of the Eucharist?

His observation is part of the reason I wrote this, after being moved by Andrea Bocelli singing Panis Angelicus at the national prayer breakfast last week — and listening to Cardinal Dolan’s talk on the Eucharist and Mary recently. If you have a few minutes — and maybe especially if you didn’t think you had the time for Mass Sunday or today (sometimes it doesn’t work out, but if we believe, do we at least think about it? Desire it to work out?) — you might take a look. There might be a good little inspiration for Lent in there.

2. Today’s readings are here.

3. 10 Saint Josephine Bakhita things here. Today’s her feast day.

4. It’s also the feast of Saint Jerome Emiliani, known as a protector of children and orphans. This from him appears in the Office of Readings today in the Liturgy of the Hours:

Sons of the Society of the Servants of the Poor, and dearly beloved brothers in Christ: Greetings from your poor father. I urge you to persevere in your love for Christ and your faithful observance of the law of Christ. In word and work I set an example for you when I was with you. And so the Lord is glorified in you through me.

Our goal is God, the source of all good. As we say in our prayer, we are to place our trust in God and in no one else. In His kindness, our Lord wished to strengthen your faith, for without it, as the evangelist points out, Christ could not have performed many of His miracles. He also wished to listen to your prayer, and so He ordained that you experience poverty, distress, abandonment, weariness and universal scorn. It was also His desire to deprive you of my physical presence, even though I am with you in spirit as your poor, dear, beloved father.

God alone knows the reasons for all this, yet we can recognize three causes. In the first place, our blessed Lord is telling you that He desires to include you among His beloved sons, provided that you remain steadfast in His ways, for this is the way He treats His friends and makes them holy.

The second reason is that He is asking you to grow continually in your confidence in Him alone and not in others. For God, as I said before, does not work in those who refuse to place all their confidence and hope in Him alone. But he does impart the fullness of His love upon those who possess a deep faith and hope; for them he does great things. So if you have been endowed with faith and hope, He will do great things for you; He will raise up the lowly. In depriving you of myself and everyone else you have loved, He will offer you an opportunity to choose one of these alternatives; either you will forsake your faith and return to the ways of the world, or you will remain steadfast in your faith and pass the test.

Now there is a third reason. God wishes to test you like gold in the furnace. The dross is consumed by the fire, but the pure gold remains and its value increases. It is in this manner that God acts with His good servant, who puts his hope in Him and remains unshaken in times of distress. God raises him up and, in return for the things he has left out of love for God, He repays him a hundred-fold in this life with eternal life hereafter.

This is the way God has dealt with all His saints. So it was with His people Israel after their period of trial in Egypt. He not only led them out of Egypt with many miracles and fed them with manna in the desert, He also gave them the promised land. If then you remain constant in faith in the face of trial, the Lord will give you peace and rest for a time in this world, and forever in the next.

5. Here’s a prayer asking his intercessory aid, especially for vulnerable children.

6. A prayer, if you don’t already pray it, for victims of abuse.

7.

8. On prayer and the Eucharist.

9. When an exorcist says make use of the sacraments, I’d take that seriously: “The Blessed Sacrament, the Eucharist is our source of healing.”

10.


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