Showing posts with label Lent. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Lent. Show all posts

March 1, 2017

Stations of the Cross - FREE Coloring Book


Just in time for inspiration during the Fridays of Lent, here is a lovely FREE coloring book, which you may download for your children.  It is based upon the Stations of the Cross:

http://www.sjtb.org/images/stations%20of%20the%20cross%20coloring%20book-Julie.pdf

March 23, 2016

The Historical Jesus

As we celebrate the remembrance of The Last Supper and Christ's passion, death, and resurrection during the Easter Triduum, I wanted to share with you this good (brief!) article about the Bible as an accurate historical source on the life of Jesus and our Catholic beliefs and traditions, which date from the earliest times of Christianity.

(....okay.  Admittedly, I probably also was inspired to share it thanks to the Jehovah's Witnesses who were kind enough to appear on my front porch today.  I hope I didn't scare them too much...)


Here's the link:


http://biblestudyforcatholics.com/reasons-confident-historical-jesus/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=reasons-confident-historical-jesus&utm_source=The+Great+Adventure&utm_campaign=125984f4a3-RSS_EMAIL_CAMPAIGN&utm_medium=email&utm_term=0_f7c841a160-125984f4a3-350637321&mc_cid=125984f4a3&mc_eid=03f1b1fb95#disqus_thread

May the conclusion of Lent bring you humble blessings, the Triduum bring you closer to Jesus in His suffering, and the Easter season bring you the hope and joy of His having died and risen....for YOU!

February 16, 2016

On the Mass

The Eucharist and the Mass are the source and summit of our Catholic Christian faith.  Unwavering belief in the authenticity of the Eucharist as the actual Body and Blood of Christ (not a mere symbol) was absolute from the very origin of Christianity.

"Then He took the bread, said the blessing, broke it, and gave it to them, saying, 'This is my body, which will be given for you; do this in memory of me.' " (Luke 22:19)

Hoc est corpus meum.

This IS my body.

Do this in memory of me.

So.  It's Lent.  And here's a nice Lenten habit for you: try to get to Mass at least one other time during the week besides Sunday.  Really.  You can do it!  Even if you can't do it every week, continue to try.

Why?

Here's why, courtesy of Dom Gregory Dix* in 1945, and I quote:


Do this in memory of Me.

Was ever another command so obeyed?

For century after century, spreading slowly to every continent and country and among every race on earth, this action has been done, in every conceivable human circumstance, for every conceivable human need from infancy and before it to extreme old age and after it, from the pinnacles of earthly greatness to the refuge of fugitives in the caves and dens of the earth.  Men have found no better thing than this to do

for kings at their crowning and for criminals going to the scaffold;

for armies in triumph or for a bride and bridegroom in a little country church;

for the proclamation of a dogma or for a good crop of wheat;

for the wisdom of the Parliament of a mighty nation or for a sick old woman afraid to die;

for a schoolboy sitting an examination or for Columbus setting out to discover America;

for the famine of whole provinces or for the soul of a dead lover;

in thankfulness because my father did not die of pneumonia;

for a village headman much tempted to return to fetich because the yams had failed;

because the Turk was at the gates of Vienna;

for the repentance of Margaret;

for the settlement of a strike;

for a son for a barren woman;

for Captain so-and-so, wounded and prisoner of war;

while the lions roared in the nearby amphitheater; on the beach at Dunkirk;

while the hiss of scythes in the thick June grass came faintly through the windows of the church;

tremulously, by an old monk on the fiftieth anniversary of his vows;

furtively, by an exiled bishop who had hewn timber all day in a prison camp near Murmansk;

gorgeously, for the canonisation of St. Joan of Arc --–

One could fill many pages with the reasons why men have done this, and not tell a hundredth part of them.  And best of all, week by week and month by month, on a hundred thousand successive Sundays, faithfully, unfailingly, across all the parishes of Christendom, the pastors have done this just to make the plebs sancta Dei – the holy common people of God.

To those who know a little of Christian history, probably the most moving of all the reflections it brings is not the thought of the great events and the well-remembered saints, but of those innumerable millions of entirely obscure faithful men and women, every one with his or her own individual hopes and fears and joys and sorrows and loves – and sins and temptations and prayers – once every whit as vivid and alive as mine are now.  They have left no slightest trace in this world, not even a name, but have passed to God utterly forgotten by men.

Yet each of them once believed and prayed as I believe and pray, and found it hard and grew slack and sinned and repented and fell again.  Each of them worshipped at the Eucharist, and found their thoughts wandering and tried again, and felt heavy and unresponsive and yet knew – just as really and pathetically as I do, these things.

[End of Dom Gregory's passage.  We now return you back to my comparatively exceedingly lame blog post.]

That's why.  

Try to get to Mass.  Go on Sunday, of course.  But, TRY to get to Mass just one other time during the week this Lent.  Or perhaps Eucharistic Adoration.  Even if you just pop in for 10 mintues!  He's there.

Waiting.

Patiently.

Waiting for YOU!

Why?

Because.

Don't you remember Who made you?
God made you.

Why did God make you?
God made you to know, love, and serve Him in this world and to be happy with Him forever in Heaven.

How can you possibly get to know Him, soften your heart to love Him, and learn how you are to serve Him if you don't even VISIT Him?  Jesus is waiting patiently for YOU in all the tabernacles of the world.  Through the miracle of the Eucharist, the person really truly present -- Body, Blood, Soul, and Divinity -- is Jesus Christ Himself.

'Tis Himself!

For YOU!

Go see Him.  Glimpse Heaven on Earth.  Get to church.  Go!  Run!  Your creator awaits you, filled with love.  For you!

May your Lenten practices and sacrifices bring you abundant blessings!


_______________________________

*  Dix, Dom Gregory, OSB. "Throughout All Ages, World Without End." The Shape of the Liturgy. Westminster: Dacre, 1945. 744. Print. 
 

Walk Softly and Carry a Great Bag


Teresa Tomeo has written a lovely little book to add to your Lenten devotional arsenal called Walk Softly and Carry a Great Bag: On-the-Go Devotions

The book already has been endorsed by numerous reputable Catholic authors, speakers, and EWTN hosts.  It's a small, portable gem, full of quick-read anecdotes followed by brief, two-sentence prayers written to raise both your heart and your mind to the Lord and His intentions for every aspect of your life.

The book's small size (only 6 1/2" square and 201 pages) makes it ideal for popping it into your purse (thus the "...Carry a Great Bag").  Its humorous and uber-quick devotions make it a lovely companion at all times, much more edifying and eminently more refreshing than that screen-based game you're tempted to turn to on your phone when you have just a moment or two to kill.

Instead this Lent, reach into your purse and open up a spiritual little ray of sunshine, illuminating your heart and your mind with God's love for you.  Teresa Tomeo's book will be the easiest thing you do for 40 days!

Enjoy!

February 2, 2016

FREE Bible Study on the BVM

I received this offer from Scott Hahn's St. Paul Center for Biblical Theology.  It's a FREE offer for twelve, weekly, scripture-based, video lessons about the Blessed Virgin Mary, beginning on Ash Wednesday (next week...already!?).  I think there is a "complete" study that will be available later for purchase, but this is for twelve free video lessons from that full study.

I have not seen the videos yet, but even if they're just an "introductory peek," I thought this might be a nice perk for anyone looking to draw closer to Our Lady during Lent, as well as some stirring, scripture-based, Catholic, food-for-the-soul for the penitential season.

...and I don't know about you, but "free" is always within my budget.  ;-)

"Grow With Mary" - The Bible and The Virgin Mary

Enjoy!  May your Lent be blessed with His peace!

March 19, 2015

Catholic Conference 4 Moms - YOU!

http://www.catholicconference4moms.com/
This Lent, as we prepare our hearts and souls for Easter, treat yourself to some spiritual refreshment, rest, and renewal.  Here is your opportunity to attend an awesome online, Catholic, moms conference -- at your convenience, at an incredible price!

http://www.catholicconference4moms.com/

The Catholic Conference 4 Moms was designed for busy moms and homeschooling mothers like us!  The conference includes 27 inspiring talks, four e-books, a rosary craft kit, Catholic foodie podcasts, a discussion guide for personal or group Bible study, and much more!

All this for $39.99!  And if you use the coupon code, "RosaryWraps," (with no spaces) you will receive a $10.00 discount, so the entire conference would be only $29.99!

You pick the speakers.  You pick when to listen to them.  You have just invested in an outstanding Lenten journey of easy spiritual refreshment and preparation for the coming of Our Lord!

http://www.catholicconference4moms.com/prizes.html


The Catholic Conference 4 Moms.  Give it some thought.  Give it your time.  Give it to another mom.  Because as moms, you're are worth it!  Nurture yourself so you may nurture your family!

February 25, 2015

On Lenten Sacrifice

What should you give up for Lent?

Remember to keep it simple.  Start small.  Don't jump off the cliff during Week One.

For children, give up your favorite toy or activity (e.g. - playing with your dolls, army men, or video games).  Do something in focus or service to God in its place (like, perhaps, graciously play your sister's favorite activity with her instead; oh, go on, it won't kill you).

For adults, give up your favorite indulgent thing.  Don't give up every grain of sugar or candy within a 50 mile radius.  But, perhaps give up buying your favorite chocolate truffles (...I know, I can't believe I just said that!).  Drink water instead of juice or soda.  Give up your favorite purchased drink at Starbucks, put that money in an envelope throughout the week, and place the money in the poor box at church on Sunday.

Remember, Lent is the spiritual version of, "mind over matter."  Show God and yourself that your will is stronger than your flesh.

Start small.  Baby steps.  You can't do this on your own, you know.  Carve out a little sacrifice, a wee pocket of spare time for God, and let Him start filling you up with inspiration and His love.

He died on the cross for you.  I think He can handle 40 days with no chocolate.  (After all, one would have to be divine to manage that, right!?)

A Lenten Creed

"The way of life as set down by St. Benedict in his Rule offers a set of Christian ideals which are sufficiently flexible, adaptable, and moderate so that no one need be dismayed or discouraged at failure to achieve the heights of holiness all at once. St. Benedict makes room for many different levels of spiritual progress when he states: '[Let the abbot] so moderate all things that there be something for the strong to strive after and nothing to dishearten the weak,' (RB 64:19)."  (source: http://oblatesavannah.com/oblates/what-are-benedictine-oblates)

I think I've just found my Lenten creed.

Both St. Benedict and St. Francis de Sales preached and wrote often and expansively on finding holiness in one's vocation, right where you are.  Now, thanks to Lent, I've got 40 days to seriously ponder and consider who I am, where I am, and what I am doing in service to God.

Remember:

God made you to know Him, to love Him, and to serve Him in this world and to be happy with Him for ever in Heaven.  Don't miss this chance to renew and refresh your focus on Him by, "giving up," extraneous distractions in your life and clearing a space to be filled by Him.

Liken it to a spiritual shoveling out of the way all the books, toys, and general detritus of your living room when company is about to arrive.  It's not that any of those items are inherently evil or shameful.  They are, however, impediments to your guests having a clear uncluttered path to your best room and the most comfortable chair.

Clear a path for God this Lent.  Invite Him into your heart and your life more deeply by clearing a few non-life-threatening things out of the way.  Don't set yourself up for failure.  I mean, c'mon -- don't give up coffee, cigarettes, and booze all at once.  Pick one and be deliberate about making a choice each day not to indulge in that thing (except on Sundays, the feast of the Resurrection).

Make it simple.  Make it stick.

If you fail, start over.
If you fall, stand up.
If you crumble, stretch out your arm and reach for His hand.

The Lord loves you.  This Lent, let Him in.

February 17, 2015

Handy-Dandy List to Lenten Sacrifice

Kerry Baunach over at Catholic Sistas published last year a wonderful, "Handy-Dandy List to Lenten Sacrifice."  What an inspiring blog post!  There's something for everyone there to enrich your prayer life in simple, do-able ways during this Lenten time of preparation.  Enjoy!

February 24, 2014

Embrace the Grace!

This Lent, I'm starting a campaign to, "Embrace the Grace" of going to confession.  Allow the Sacrament of Reconciliation, which one of our priest friends calls, "The Sacrament of Peace," to cleanse your soul and refill it with His peace.

This Lent, go to confession.  Go.  Run.  Don't walk.  Go.  Go!

Encounter Jesus in all His eternal mercy and allow Him to love you and forgive you of all your life's mistakes, big or small.  Embrace the grace of the sacrament, endure your Good Friday with Him, so that on Easter morning you, too, may rejoice -- He is risen!  Alleluia!

February 10, 2014

Jesus Is the Living Water

We've just been through a spell during which, due to a widespread power outage from a winter storm, we were without electricity for a few days.  After pondering our (comparatively minor) difficulties, it was clear to me:

Electricity wasn't the problem -- we had daylight all day, and candles, flashlights, and lanterns all night.

Heat wasn't the problem -- we had two woodstoves within four fireplaces and cords of seasoned wood stacked up.

Modern technological connectivity wasn't the problem -- we had chargers for all our devices that could be re-charged in our vehicles.

Food preservation wasn't the problem -- we had a small generator to periodically give our refrigerator/freezer a shot in the arm for continued freshness.

Water wasn't the problem -- we had fresh snow blanketing the ground, water bottles stored in the garage, and a lake on the other side of the woods.

However, running water was the problem.  You can only wash so many dirty dishes, dirty clothes, dirty shoes/boots, dirty rags, dirty cars, and dirty people in buckets of water before the bucket quickly becomes soiled and the water within it fouled.  I could see our accustomed level of sanitation rapidly deteriorating.

Running water was the problem.  Cool, clear, fresh, continuously flowing, running water.

In the Bible, Jesus speaks to the woman at the well and refers to Himself as the "living water":


Jesus answered and said to her, “If you knew the gift of God and who is saying to you, ‘Give me a drink,’ you would have asked him and he would have given you living water.” [The woman] said to him, “Sir, you do not even have a bucket and the cistern is deep; where then can you get this living water? Are you greater than our father Jacob, who gave us this cistern and drank from it himself with his children and his flocks?” Jesus answered and said to her, “Everyone who drinks this water will be thirsty again; but whoever drinks the water I shall give will never thirst; the water I shall give will become in him a spring of water welling up to eternal life.” The woman said to him, “Sir, give me this water, so that I may not be thirsty or have to keep coming here to draw water.” (John 4:10-15)


The woman didn't initially understand that Jesus Himself was the living water of which He spoke, the wellspring of eternal life.

No matter how many other things we are juggling in life, and no matter how well we think we are juggling them, eventually we will face a need for cool, clear, fresh, continuously flowing, running water.  Running water not only will cleanse whatever is dirty, but it will cleanse it continuously and repeatedly, as well as carry away all the dirt and grime.

Isn't Jesus just like this?

Isn't His Sacrament of Reconciliation (which Bishop Victor B. Galeone refers to as, "the Sacrament of Peace") just like this?

No matter what we are managing to multi-task in our own lives, we will need at some point (whether we initially are willing to admit it or not) to stop and turn to Jesus for a true, thorough, and complete cleansing.  Of our lives.  Of our souls.  Only He can provide the endlessly fresh deep cleaning that we need.  Continuously.  Repeatedly.  Honestly.  And thoroughly.  For free!

If you haven't been to Confession in a while, start thinking about it now.  Lent is coming next month (Ash Wednesday is March 4th), and it's the perfect time to renew our purification in Christ.  It's the perfect time to clean out the dirt, to "scrape off and fluff up" as my friend Alice likes to say.  Through the priest, Jesus Christ makes Himself available to YOU during the Sacrament of Reconciliation, to absolve you of your sins and, as he advised St. Mary Magdalene, to set your feet on a path toward Him to go and do this sin no more (cf. John 8:11).

We're never going to be perfect.  We're never going to be utterly, sparklingly, heavenly clean.  At least not here on Earth.  But in those few moments of Confession, the Lord will absolve you of your sins, wipe your earthly slate clean, and provide you with the graces you need to move forward in your life, beyond the weight and filth of whatever dirt your soul might be carting around.

So go.  Go.  Go to Confession!  Go!!!  I mean it.

Believe me.  There's absolutely nothing you can confess to the priest that he hasn't heard or heard of already.  He'll keep your secret, then let it go by handing it immediately over to God.

....and if you're still shy, pick a priest you've never met at a different parish and go screen.

But don't miss out.  Don't miss the gift, grace, and blessing of the true cleansing provided Jesus, the Living Water, every time you go to Confession.  Only He can fit your soul for heaven, and that's one power you don't want to be without!


March 30, 2013

Stay Faithful

“Believe in the Lord Jesus and you and your household will be saved.” (Acts 16:31)

March 29, 2013

Good Friday

"Then Jesus said, “Father, forgive them, they know not what they do.” (Luke 23:34)

Good Friday

"No one has greater love than this, to lay down one’s life for one’s friends." (John 15:13)

Good Friday

"But he was pierced for our sins,
crushed for our iniquity.
He bore the punishment that makes us whole,
by his wounds we were healed."
(Isaiah 53:5)


March 20, 2013

The Tomb Is Empty!


If you've got a green thumb, here's a nice indoor project to do in anticipation of finding the empty tomb on Easter morning!  It takes about seven days to come to fruition, so plan ahead.


http://www.colleenhammond.com/family-life/craft-easter-garden/

Using a shallow dish, potting soil, shade grass seed, rocks, miniature crosses made from twigs, and a tiny buried flower pot, you can create a table-top Easter garden featuring the empty tomb!  Just keep it in a warm, sunny spot, and moisten it with several spritzes a day from a spray water bottle.  It's a fun project for the kids, and a beautiful reminder for us all of the stone being rolled away from the garden tomb.

Keep the flower pot's sepulchre opening closed with a larger rock until Easter Sunday morning!  And then.......

Christ is risen!  Indeed, He is risen!

February 28, 2013

The Light Is On For You

Hey, here's a thought.

Has anyone ever threatened one of your children?  Anything from complete annihilation to even just looking at your kid cross-eyed?  What was your immediate reaction?

No, be honest here.

Did you want to smile and embrace that person?  Welcome him or her into your home?  Thank that person for his or her kind attention to your child?  Let that person within a thousand mile radius of your child again?  Ever?  For as long as they live?

Yeah.  I thought not.  Me neither.

And yet, that's exactly what the Blessed Mother does for us.

I've never been able to understand why on Earth Mary would want to lead us, even welcome us, into the presence of her Son when we're the very ones who put Him on the cross in the first place. I know if anyone ever so much as touched one single solitary hair on my child's head....well, "Momma Grizzly" doesn't begin to describe what I would have in store for them.  Grrrrrr.

(...which explains why I'm never called The Blessed Mother.)

And yet, the Blessed Virgin Mary, the Mother of Our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ, continues not only to invite us into the Divine Mercy of His Sacred Heart, but she actually appears to us through visionaries across the ages to renew her offer for us to come to her Son.

Wow.

This Lent, while we recognize that it was our sins that nailed Christ to the cross, please also recognize what Our Lady and the Church teach us about His infinite mercy: "The Light Is On For YOU."  Come to Jesus in the Sacrament of Reconciliation.  Humble yourself for a moment.  Confess your sins.  Release all that scarring pain.  Allow Him to nail your sins (ALL your sins) to the cross in union with Him, so that on Easter morning you too may rejoice in the love, mercy, and resurrection of the Lord!

Because isn't that the reason for which we're all here?  To know, love, and serve Him in this world AND to be happy with Him forever in heaven?

How do you expect to get into heaven if you're carrying around the baggage of sin?  Big sins.  Little sins.  Dramatic sins.  Mundane sins.  Repetitive sins.  Drop that luggage on the turnstile of confession and let is goooooooooooooooooo.  Gone.  Forever.

Te absolvo!

The Light Is On For You.

February 17, 2013

Ember Wednesday

Remember, this Wednesday the 20th is the first Ember Wednesday of the Church year!  See my post here for all the details on the ancient feasts of "Ember Days".

You won't want to miss this bonus opportunity during Lent to join the universal Church in prayer and fasting.  Many hands make light work, so let's carry each other and the cross of Christ -- together!
 

February 16, 2013

Lent - It's Not Just About the Chocolate

With special thanks to Father Shane Johnson, a Catholic priest with the Legionaries of Christ and youth chaplain at St. Peter's Parish in Yonkers, NY at fathershane.com.

Lenten Resources

Here are some wonderful resources for Lent, as you seek to accompany Jesus on His way to the cross through your prayers and sacrifices:

Lenten Sacrifice Cross:
http://www.casciabooks.com/lent.html
Simply click on the teal words, "Lenten Cross" and you can download a nice copy to print out for each of the kids, to help them stay focused on their sacrifice each day!

Mercy Cross:
http://www.catholicsistas.com/2013/02/12/making-sacrifices-real/
Follow these easy directions for practicing the Corporal and Spiritual Works of Mercy, finishing at Easter with a visual representation of all your sacrificial gifts for Jesus!

Lenten Pinboard:
http://pinterest.com/catholicsistas/lent/
Here is the Catholic Sistas pinboard for Lent on Pinterest.  It's filled with wonderful links and ideas!

Catholic Icing:
http://catholicicing.com/?s=lent
As usual, Lacy has lots of hands-on ideas for small children to really engage in Lent, from cheap and simple meatless meals to a Lenten Path to color!

Tomb Garden:
http://www.colleenhammond.com/family-life/craft-easter-garden/
If you've got a green thumb, here's a nice indoor project to do in anticipation of finding the empty tomb on Easter morning!

Lenten Prayer Chain:
http://www.catholicinspired.com/2013/02/lenten-prayer-chain-countdown-plus-more.html
Jennifer has included some easy printables to make a Lenten Prayer Chain, as well as LOTS more activities for Lent and Easter (the latter for those who like to plan ahead!), including a clothes pin crucifix, how to braid palm branches, and a list of Link Ups with at least 20 more easy, fun, practical ideas!

Good Friday Meal:

http://showerofroses.blogspot.com/2011/04/lenten-dinner-on-good-friday.html
Jessica sets a wonderful table for Good Friday, full of simple foods with symbolic meanings to help draw your family closer to the Stations of the Cross!

Lenten Pinboard:
https://pinterest.com/avemommas/lent/
I just started a pinboard for Lent, as well.  Please let me know of any helpful ideas for Lent that we can pin and share with everyone!