Devotions

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As Good Catholics, we should honour the Sacred Heart of Jesus by doing this devotion for 9 consecutive Fridays and then by attending Holy Communion as often as possible, daily if our gift is such, we must enthrone an image of the Sacred Heart of Jesus in our homes as Our King and also an image of the Immaculate Heart of Mary our Mother and Queen. Click here to read more and then share your thoughts on the First Nine Fridays.

If you haven’t made the First Fridays yet, why not begin today?   Click here for traditional Mass centres but note, no Mass in Glasgow this evening.

However, there are Catholics (including priests) who can’t see the value in  this kind of devotion; they wonder if this is really how God works.  After all, the revelations to St Margaret Mary were only private revelations.  Do they matter?  Do they really make a difference in God’s plan of salvation?

Are these rather sophisticated Catholics lacking in humility, or are devotions such as the First Fridays tailor made for the simple, uneducated souls who wouldn’t know Hans Kung from King Kong?

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In email correspondence with Torkay on the subject of music in modern parishes, it became clear that this was a thread topic waiting to happen. We’ve all been there, suffered them: the popular tunes with the heretical sentiments.  My all time NON favourite is the post-Communion “He comes to me, in sharing bread and wine” with the Magnificat swung to the tune “Will ye go, lassie, go” a close second. Torkay emailed the list below, to prompt discussion because it is surely important that voices raised in song during Mass and other liturgies, should not be raised in heresy.

Torkay’s list…

1. Taste and See, James E. Moore, Jr. (a Communion anthem)

“Taste and see, taste and see, the goodness of the Lord.”

2. We Are One in Christ, James Chepponis

REFRAIN: “As the bread of life is broken, the cup of love outpoured…”

V.3: “In the bread of life here given, we become what we receive. In the cup of love here offered, affirm what we believe.”

3. Ubi Caritas, Bob Hurd

V.2: “In true communion let us gather, let us rejoice in him (sic)…”

V.3: “May we who gather at this table to share the bread of life, become a sacrament of love, your healing touch, O Christ.”

4. Mass of Creation, Marty Haugen (this “Mass” is practically pagan)

Subtitle: “Song of Fire and Water”

Rite of Sprinkling

V.1: “We are fire and water, we are symbol and sign of grace, we are the mystery.”

V.2: “In the water we seek him, in the wellspring of all that lives, all who are thirsty.”

V.3:  “In the fire we seek him, in the hungers and pains we bear, hope for the kingdom.”

Gospel Acclamation

V.4: “Come, O Spirit, kindle fire in the hearts of all your people.”

Memorial Acclamation

“Let us proclaim the mystery of faith: Christ has died, Christ has risen, Christ will come again.” (Torkay’s comment: oops! Wrong mystery!)

Jesus, Lamb of God (i.e. Agnus Dei)

V.2: “Jesus, Bread of Life, you take away the sins of the world.”

What about your list?  Are there hymns that you can’t sing in church?  Have you spoken to your priest or organist?  Given the crisis in the Church, should priests make sure that the hymns in use are (excuse the pun!) sound?

It seems to me that modern hymns are not worshipping God at all.  They are either making the congregation  role play God  (“I the Lord, of sea and sky, I have heard my people cry”) or they’re singing about themselves (“Here I am, Lord, is it I, Lord?”)

What do you  think?  Is there anyone out there who actually LIKES the modern songs?  Or, like me, do  you hanker after the beautiful hymns of praise and adoration, seldom heard in modern parishes any more?

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Cardinal Severino Poletto, custodian of the Holy Shroud and Archbishop of Turin, was in Rome on Thursday morning to officially present plans and progress at a press conference for the Shroud’s exposition this spring. He emphasized the “spiritual” benefits that will be provided to pilgrims through their contemplation of the image.

The famous Shroud, which is believed to be the burial shroud of Jesus, will be on display in the Cathedral of Turin from April 10 – May 20 of this year. Msgr. Giuseppe Ghiberti, president of the archdiocesan commission on the Shroud, said at the press conference that no research would be done on it during the days of the exposition.  Click here to read more

As we approach Holy Week, during which, incidentally, this blog closes down for the week, is it helpful to read about, meditate on, the shroud believed to be Christ’s burial shroud?

Is the fact that – try as they have done -  nobody has been able to reproduce the shroud, likely to help non-believers to bridge what they perceive as a gap between religion and science?

Click on ‘comments’ with your views and to share any knowledge or experiences you have, which relate to the Shroud of Turin.

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Today’s feast recalls a key event in salvation  history - Our Lady’s “Fiat”.   This thread is to pay tribute to Our Lady and – as we do on Feast Day threads – for sharing stories, devotions, prayers etc.

In particular, it would be interesting to find sermons, especially sermons from the saints and famous preachers, on the subject of the Annunciation and what this feast teaches us about Our Lady, about women, about virtue and about anything else that you care to mention.  So, get Googling!

While wishing everyone a very happy Feast  Day, I would ask you all to remember, in prayer, my friend Louise, whose Requiem Mass and burial take place today.   Eternal rest grant unto her O Lord, and let perpetual light, shine upon her, may she rest in peace.

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Blogger Naomi emailed an entertaining (if slightly troubling) clip of someone, somewhere in Ireland, having a spot of car trouble by the harbour.  Since it’s St Patrick’s Day – my patron saint – I thought it would be nice to have a break from debating and allow you all to (a) enjoy Naomi’s clip and (b) wish those of us who bear St Patrick’s name, a very happy feast day!   And special Feast Day wishes have to go to blogger Petrus’s new baby son, Patrick, since this is his very first St Patrick’s Day on the planet earth.  An adorable little boy, we wish Patrick a very VERY happy first St Patrick’s Day!

Click here to enjoy the film clip – you need to keep clicking on the forward button.  The whole thing only takes seconds, so keep focused or you’ll miss the fun.

If you have any happy memories of a visit to Ireland or any stories – pious, interesting, or just plain fun – share them with us today.

A very happy St Patrick’s Day to one and all!

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I know it’s not Lent yet, but I received a request for a devotional thread which would allow us to reflect on the actual sufferings of Our Lord during His Passion, based on a medical evidence.  It’s something we’ve never discussed before and since  Torkay sent an interesting link, it seemed a good idea.  So, click here to read the article.

Then share your thoughts and any prayers or links you have that may help to deepen our devotion to the Suffering Christ.  Reflecting on Our Lord’s intense suffering should serve to put our own petty problems and annoyances into perspective and cause us to delve more deeply into the mystery of our salvation and to marvel at the price paid by Christ for our souls.

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During  Advent, we should be reflecting on the essentials of Catholic life.  Advent is basically, a time of prayer and penance – a period of four weeks when we  remember that our Redeemer became incarnate of the Virgin Mary, became man,  lived and died on the cross in order to open the gates of Heaven for us.  Prayer and penance are the essentials of Catholic life.  What are the other “essentials”?  To benefit spiritually from the season of Advent, and to bring us face to face with what it means to live a truly Catholic life,  it might help to consider what we can learn from the Advent saints.  
Click here to read their stories and then click on ‘comments’ with your thoughts.

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“There is a Mexican saying that we die three deaths: the first when our bodies die, the second when our bodies are lowered into the earth out of sight, and the third when our loved ones forget us. Catholics forestall that last death by seeing the faithful dead as members of the Church, alive in Christ, and by praying for them — and asking their prayers for us — always. Cardinal Wiseman wrote in his Lecture XI:

Sweet is the consolation of the dying man, who, conscious of imperfection, believes that there are others to make intercession for him, when his own time for merit has expired; soothing to the afflicted survivors the thought that they possess powerful means of relieving their friend. In the first moments of grief, this sentiment will often overpower religious prejudice, cast down the unbeliever on his knees beside the remains of his friend and snatch from him an unconscious prayer for rest; it is an impulse of nature which for the moment, aided by the analogies of revealed truth, seizes at once upon this consoling belief. But it is only a flitting and melancholy light, while the Catholic feeling, cheering though with solemn dimness, resembles the unfailing lamp, which the piety of the ancients is said to have hung before the sepulchres of their dead…” 
Click here to read the rest of this article

Consider this an “anything (about the Holy Souls in Purgatory) goes” thread.  Today we remember, especially, the souls of the faithful departed, so as well as praying for them and hearing Mass if we possibly can, let’s remember them here – in whatever edifying way bloggers wish to do so, not least to offer solace and comfort to the perhaps recently bereaved.  Tell us your thoughts, recount stories, prayers, hymns etc.   Anything and everything that will enable us to spend this holy day well and profitably, for our own soul and the souls of others – especially the holy souls in Purgatory.    Eternal rest grant unto them, O Lord, and let perpetual light shine upon them;  may they rest in peace. 

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We’ve been asked to publish a thread to allow visitors to this site to post requests for prayers, asking for a remembrance for a special intention, that sort of thing.  Since the blogger who made the suggestion goes by the name “Guardian Angel”, how could we refuse?

So, if you wish us to add your special intention to our prayers, please click on ‘comments’ with your request.  Or if you have a link to an item of spiritual or devotional interest or a story of a miracle to share – anything, really, that falls into the “spiritual/devotional” category, this is the thread for you!

Yesterday, visiting some Carmelite nuns, they posed a very interesting question to me:  who, they asked, who would you prefer to spend recreation time with – St Therese of Lisieux (the Little Flower) or St Teresa of Avila?

That was quite a conversation starter!  I won’t tell you my own thoughts – at least not yet – but it occurred to me that it was time we had a good old fashioned “spirituality” thread where we could really think through what it takes to build up our spiritual lives.  Is there a “buy one, get one free option” where we can read this book and acquire that virtue? 

Here are some thoughts to get us started.   Firstly, a spin off from the Carmelite question above – which saint(s) would you most like to spend time with and/or take advice from and why?

Secondly, what’s your favourite spiritual reading – and why?   Here’s a link to the solid fare found in The Imitation of Christ, longtime favourite of both religious and laity.    

http://www.leaderu.com/cyber/books/imitation/imitation.html                                                                                                                                                              

Share your thoughts on what it means to be a “spiritual” person; what, in other words, are the ingredients of holiness?

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