Why pray the Rosary every day for a year?


Each time the Blessed Virgin has appeared-- whether it be to Saint Bernadette Soubirous at Lourdes; to Lucia, Jacinta, and Francisco at Fatima; or to Mariette Beco at Banneux-- she has asserted the importance, saving grace, and power of praying the Holy Rosary on a daily basis. Based upon her words, the Rosary is penance and conversion for sinners, a pathway to peace, an end to war, and a powerful act of faith in Jesus Christ. Pope Paul VI presented the Rosary as a powerful means to reach Christ "not merely with Mary but indeed, insofar as this is possible to us, in the same way as Mary, who is certainly the one who thought about Him more than anyone else has ever done."

To show us how this is done, perhaps no one has been more eloquent than the great Cardinal Newman, who wrote: "The great power of the Rosary consists in the fact that it translates the Creed into Prayer. Of course, the Creed is already in a certain sense a prayer and a great act of homage towards God, but the Rosary brings us to meditate again on the great truth of His life and death, and brings this truth close to our hearts. Even Christians, although they know God, usually fear rather than love Him. The strength of the Rosary lies in the particular manner in which it considers these mysteries, since all our thinking about Christ is intertwined with the thought of His Mother, in the relations between Mother and Son; the Holy Family is presented to us, the home in which God lived His infinite love."


As Mary said at Fatima, "Jesus wants to use you to make Me known and loved. He wishes to establish the devotion to My Immaculate Heart throughout the world. I promise salvation to whoever embraces it; these souls will be dear to God, like flowers put by Me to adorn his throne."



January 4, 2013: Saint Faraildis of Ghent, Patron of Widows, Sick Children, Cattle, Small Animals, Victims of Abuse, and... Butter?

Posted by Jacob


Today, January 4, we celebrate the feast day of Saint Faraildis of Ghent (650 – 740, also known as Saint Pharaildis), patron saint of sick children, cattle, small animals, widows, victims of abuse, and strangely, butter.   Saint Faraildis lived a life of quiet devotion to the Lord, despite pressures and physical abuse at the hands of her husband.  Saint Faraildis demonstrates perseverance and steadfast hope and faith in the Lord, even in the midst of difficult times.  Perhaps there is a lesson there for all of us!

Saint Faraildis’ lineage is somewhat unclear, with historians best estimates that she was daughter to Theodoric, Duke of Lorraine and Saint Amelberga of Maubeuge, and half-sister to Saints Gudula, Reinhildis, Ermentrudis, and Emebertus  As per the custom of her times, she was married off by her father to a husband, Guido, when she reached the age of maturity.  However, unbeknownst to her father and her new husband, Faraildis had consecrated herself a virgin to the Lord, pledging eternal devotion and earthly chastity.  Rather than spend her nights with her husband, Faraildis frequently visited the nearby church, spending her evenings in prayer.   Guido, wishing for children, became increasingly jealous of her devotion to the Lord, and angry by her refusal to subjugate herself to him.  He eventually became violent, inflicting physical abuse and torment upon her.  She withstood all insult with pious dignity, nursing her husband without ill will following an accident that broke his legs.  During this time, she ministered to him, and spoke to him of the Lord and salvation, but this only served to infuriate him more.

It is unclear when or how Guido died, but he left Faraildis a widow.  From the time of his death, she devoted herself entirely to a humble and simple life, offering daily penance, and spending long hours in prayer.  She further became recognized as a holy woman in her town, and was sought out for advice, counsel, and reportedly, miracles.  She is said to have led the life of a saintly nun, rising before sunrise each morning and journeying to a nearby monastery for matins. 

Saint Faraildis is frequently pictured with loaves of bread, given one of the miracles reported at her intercession.  It is told that a poor woman was once begging for bread for her hungry children at a rich home.  However, the woman of the home refused to provide, exclaiming, “May Saint Faraildis change the loaves into stone if I have any here!”  Per legend, all of the woman’s bread turned to stone, with two still preserved in Ghent as holy relics.  Similarly, Saint Faraildis is oftentimes pictured with a goose, whom she is said to have restored to life after it was stolen, killed, cooked, and eaten.  Per holy legend, she gathered the remnants of the bird, and it was reanimated and flew.

Saint Faraildis died at the age of ninety, around the time of the Norman invasion.  Her relics were carried with the monks of the local church, where they were interred at Ghent.  She remains the patron of the city to this day, where a city-wide celebration continues to be held in her honor each feast day.



Daughter of Saint Amalberga and devout niece
of Saint Gertrude, and sister of Saint Gudula,
Despite your desire to consecrate yourself to God
Your parents made you enter into marriage.
On becoming a widow, you lived in prayer.
St Faraildis, pray to Christ for our souls!
Holy Faraildis, pray to God for us.

Memorial Day Prayers

Posted by Jacob

On this Memorial Day, we pray for all those who have died in service of God and country, and for all those who continue to serve in military forces around the world.  May the Lord bless them and keep them safe in the faith.

For those who have died


O loving God . . .
I pray you to welcome my deceased family,friends, loved ones into heaven with you. Forgive them their sins and reward them their goodness.
Grant that I may be with them again in your Peaceful presence.
Amen.

O God our Father,Creator of all the living,
we entrust to Your gentle care all those we love who have gone before us;
and have gone to their rest in the hope of rising again.
Holy Mary, Mother of God, pray for us sinners,
now and at the hour of our death.
Amen.

O God, Creator and Redeemer of all the faithful,
grant to the souls of our departed loved ones,
the remission of all their sins,
that by means of our pious supplications,
they may obtain the joy of heaven which they have earnestly desired.
We ask this through Christ our Lord.
Amen.

Merciful Father, hear our prayer and console us.
As we renew our faith in your Son,whom you raised from the dead,
strengthen our hope that all of our departed brothers and sisters
will share in his resurrection,
who lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit,
one God, for ever and ever.
Amen.





For those who serve

Almighty God
We stand before you in supplication, 
Asking Your Divine mercy and protection, 
To envelop with Your invincible armor, 
Our loved ones in all branches of the service. 

Give them courage and strength
Against all enemies, 
Both spiritual and physical, 
And hasten their safe journey, 
Back to their homes and families. 

If it be Your Holy Will
That they be gathered to Your bosom, 
With the eternal vanguard of the saints, 
Let their journey to Your everlasting arms
Be swift and painless, 
Where they may stand in honor and glory, 
Praising You for all eternity. Amen. 

(Prayer from Catholic.org)

Prayers in a Time of War

  1. For Troops
    All-powerful and ever-living God,
    when Abraham left his native land
    and departed from his people
    you kept him safe through all his journeys.
    Protect these soldiers.
    Be their constant companion and their strength in battle,
    their refuge in every adversity.
    Guide them, O Lord, that they may return home in safety.
    We ask this through Christ our Lord.
  2. Prayer of a Spouse for a Soldier
    God of power and might,
    at every moment and in every place
    you are near to those who call upon your name in faith.
    In marriage you have blessed us with a share in your divine love.
    Look upon my husband/wife and keep him/her in your safekeeping,
    no matter where the road may lead.
    And when the battle is ended,
    bring him/her safely home to those who love him.
    We ask this through Christ our Lord.
  3. Prayer of a Son or Daughter for a Parent
    Loving God
    you watch over each and every one of your children
    Hear my prayer for my father/mother
    Be his/her constant companion.
    Protect him/her no matter where he/she goes,
    and bring him/her safely and quickly home to those who love him/her.
    We ask this through Christ our Lord.
  4. Prayer of a Parent for a Soldier
    Father all-powerful and ever-loving God,
    from before we were born,
    your love has nurtured and sustained us.
    Hear my prayer for N., my son/daughter.
    Keep him/her safe in time of battle
    and faithful to you, day in and day out.
    Bring him/her safely home to those who love him/her.
    We ask this through Christ our Lord.
  5. Prayer for Those who Await a Soldier's Return
    God of all goodness,
    Look with love on those who wait
    for the safe return of their loved ones
    who serve in the armed forces of their country.
    In faith and hope, we turn to you for comfort.
    Grant that we may trust in your mercy
    and send an angel to sustain us as we await their safe return.
    We ask this through Christ our Lord.
  6. For Government Leaders
    God of power and might, wisdom and justice,
    through you authority is rightly administered,
    laws are enacted, and judgment is decreed.
    Assist with your spirit of counsel and fortitude
    the President and other government leaders of these United States.
    May they always seek
    the ways of righteousness, justice and mercy.
    Grant that they may be enabled by your powerful protection
    to lead our country with honesty and integrity.
    We ask this through Christ our Lord.
  7. For the Safety of Soldiers
    Almighty and eternal God,
    those who take refuge in you will be glad
    and forever will shout for joy.
    Protect these soldiers as they discharge their duties.
    Protect them with the shield of your strength
    and keep them safe from all evil and harm.
    May the power of your love enable them to return home
    in safety, that with all who love them,
    they may ever praise you for your loving care.
    We ask this through Christ our Lord.
  8. For our Enemies
    Jesus, Prince of Peace,
    you have asked us to love our enemies
    and pray for those who persecute us.
    We pray for our enemies and those who oppose us.
    With the help of the Holy Spirit,
    may all people learn to work together
    for that justice which brings true and lasting peace.
    To you be glory and honor for ever and ever.
  9. For Courage in the time of Battle
    O Prince of peace, we humbly ask your protection
    for all our men and women in military service.
    Give them unflinching courage to defend
    with honor, dignity and devotion,
    the rights of all who are imperiled
    by injustice and evil.
    Be their rock, their shield, and their stronghold
    and let them draw their strength from you.
    For you are God, for ever and ever.
  10. In a Time of Waiting
    All powerful and ever-living God,
    Guard our churches, our homes, our schools,
    our hospitals, our factories, and all the places where we gather.
    Deliver us from harm and peril.
    Protect our land and its peoples from enemies within and without.
    Grant an early peace with victory founded upon justice.
    Instill in the hearts and minds of men and women everywhere
    a firm purpose to live forever in peace and good will toward all.
    We ask this through Christ our Lord.
  11. For Deceased Veterans
    O God,
    by whose mercy the faithful departed find rest,
    look kindly on your departed veterans who gave their
    lives in the service of their country.
    Grant that through the passion, death, and resurrection of your Son
    they may share in the joy of your heavenly kingdom
    and rejoice in you with your saints forever.
    We ask this through Christ our Lord.

A Soldier's Prayers

  1. For Families and friends Left At Home
    O God, Protector of all people and nations,
    protect my family and friends at home
    from the violence and evil of others.
    Keep them safe from the weapons of hate and destruction
    and guard them against the deeds of evildoers.
    Grant them your protection and care
    in tranquility and peace.
    Grant this through Christ our Lord.
  2. On the Eve of Battle
    God of power and mercy,
    maker and love of peace,
    to know you is to live,
    and to serve you is to reign.
    Through the intercession of St. Michael, the archangel,
    be our protection in battle against all evil.
    Help me [us] to overcome war and violence
    and to establish your law of love and justice.
    Grant this through Christ our Lord.
  3. For Hope in the Midst of Destruction
    God of mercy,
    you know the secrets of all human hearts,
    for you know who is just and you forgive the repentant sinner.
    Hear my prayer in the midst of destruction;
    give me patience and hope,
    so that under your protection and with you as my guide,
    I may one day be reunited with my family and friends
    in peace, tranquility, and love.
    Grant this through Christ our Lord.
  4. Prayer For Officers In Command
    God and Father of Our Lord Jesus Christ,
    Hear my prayer for these soldiers under my command.
    Grant that I may bring the spirit of Christ
    to all my efforts and orders
    as I exercise my authority over those entrusted to my care.
    Inform my judgment with your Holy Spirit
    so that I may make decisions
    in conformity with your law and for the common good.
    Grant this through Christ our Lord.
  5. For Fellow Combatants
    Lord God,
    Remember Christ your Son who is peace itself
    and who has washed away our hatred with His blood.
    Because you love all men and women,
    look with mercy on all who are engaged in battle.
    Banish the violence and evil within all combatants
    so that one day, we may all deserve to be
    called your sons and your daughters.
    Grant this through Christ our Lord.
  6. For the innocent victims of war
    Lord God,
    your own Son was delivered into the hands of the wicked,
    yet he prayed for his persecutors
    and overcame hatred with the blood of the Cross.
    Relive the sufferings of the innocent victims of war;
    grant them peace of mind, healing of body,
    and a renewed faith in your protection and care.
    Grant this through Christ our Lord.
  7. Prayer for refugees and victims of war
    Lord God,
    no one is a stranger to you
    and no one is ever far from your loving care.
    In your kindness, watch over refugees and victims of war,
    those separated from their loved ones,
    young people who are lost,
    and those who have left home or who have run away from home.
    Bring them back safely to the place where they long to be
    and help us always to show your kindness
    to strangers and to all in need
    Grant this through Christ our Lord.
(Prayers from the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops, http://www.usccb.org/prayer-and-worship/prayers/prayer-for-troops.cfm)

November 4: Saint Charles Borromeo

Posted by Jacob

“If we wish to make any progress in the service of God we must begin every day of our life with new eagerness. We must keep ourselves in the presence of God as much as possible and have no other view or end in all our actions but the divine honor.”


Today, November 4, we also celebrate the feast day of Saint Charles Borromeo (1538-1584), patron saint of catechists and catechumens, Archbishop of Milan, inspiration to many religious orders, and example of discipline and zeal for the Lord. Saint Charles is a leading figure in the Catholic reformation.

Born in 1538 in the castle of Arona (outside Milan, Italy), Charles was the son of Count Gilbert Borromeo, a descendant of one of the most ancient families of Lombardy. Charles’ father, the count, was known for his piousness, charity and alms-giving, and rigorous fasting and abstinence from meat. Charles’ mother, the Countess, was also exceptionally virtuous. As a whole, Charles’ extended family demonstrated great piety, with his uncle becoming Pope Pius IV.

From an early age—in fact, as soon as Charles could begin determining his own course of study-- it became clear that he as destined to work in the vineyard of the Lord. Despite a serious speech impediment, he proclaimed the good news of Christ, and demonstrated His virtues in his interactions with all he encountered. When he was twelve years old, Charles was entrusted (legally) with the oversight of an abbey, and was frequent to remind his father that any revenue was to be given directly to the poor. At that same time, he received the clerical tonsure (the haircut of the monk), and was sent to a Benedictine Abbey to prepare for a religious life.

Charles’ father died when Charles was just twenty years old, and he left his studies of law to return home. Upon settling his father’s affairs, he continued his studies, earning his doctorate. When he was just 21, upon the elevation of his uncle to the papacy, he was appointed cardinal, and at 22, the Archbishop of Milan. His uncle, Pope Pius IV, assigned to him the administrative duties of Rome, however—a position that generally required many years in service and great practical and theological wisdom and prudence.

Charles served admirably (yet humbly), maintaining delicate papal relations with other nations, as protector of Portugal and the Low Countries, and the head of the Knights of Malta, and the Orders of Carmel and Saint Francis.

Actively engaged in the reformation of the Church, Charles was instrumental at the Council of Trent. There, he participated in the majority of the 25 sessions. Among his many statements:

“Let us fear lest the angered judge say to us: If you were the enlighteners of My Church, why have you closed your eyes? If you pretended to be shepherds of the flock, why have you suffered it to stray? Salt of the earth, you have lost your savor. Light of the world, they that sat in darkness and the shadow of death have never seen you shine. You were apostles; who, then, put your apostolic firmness to the test, since you have done nothing but seek to please men? You were the mouth of the Lord, and you have made that mouth dumb. If you allege in excuse that the burden was beyond your strength, why did you make it the object of your ambitious intrigues?”

When the Council of Trent reached it’s conclusion, Charles declared his intent to leave Rome and return to Milan to attend to his diocese. The urgency of the situation there persuaded the Pope to consent regretfully to his departure. Saint Charles intended to put into execution the reforming decrees of the Council, create seminaries and schools and in general restore discipline in the Church of Milan. This, as with all he undertook, he achieved with hard work, patience, and arduous zeal. He, himself, visited the most remote corners of his diocese, traveling in mountainous regions amid the greatest dangers, which he regarded as nothing unusual, and unworthy of mention. He was criticized for his unwavering enforcement of reform, and bore this criticism with joy. To his most ardent critic, he bequeathed a pension for life, treating him with the greatest respect and consideration while he lived. To himself, he imposed the most severe austerities and penances, spending his days in fast and prayer, refusing at times to even venture outside. When it was suggested to him that he might take some fresh air, the holy Archbishop replied that the Holy Scriptures should be his garden.

Despite his strict adherence and inflexibility, Saint Charles love of his congregation, neighbors, critics, and especially the poor, was overflowing and unstoppable. He served all in need, oftentimes depriving himself to do so. When the plague raged in Milan, he sold his household furniture, even his bed, to aid the sick and needy, and thereafter slept upon bare boards. He visited those stricken by the disease, consoled them as a tender father, conferred upon them the sacraments with his own hands. A true mediator, he implored forgiveness day and night between enemies and those in disagreement. He once ordered an atonement procession and appeared in it with a rope about his neck, with bare and bloody feet, a cross upon his shoulder—thus presenting himself as an expiatory sacrifice for his people to ward off divine punishment. His sermons were legendary for their powers of conversion, and the schools he established for their instruction of youth in the Christian faith and doctrine. In total, the schools he established numbered seven hundred and forty, in which over three thousand catechists were employed, presiding over forty thousand students.

Saint Charles died at the young age of forty-six, dressed in sackcloth and ashes, holding a picture of Jesus Crucified in his hands. His last words were, "See, Lord, I am coming, I am coming soon." His relics are enshrined in a white marble tomb at the Cathedral of Milan. Numerous miracles have been reported there, by the power of his intercession.

Saint Charles was one of the towering figures of the Catholic Reformation, a patron of learning and the arts, and though he achieved a position of great power, he used it with humility, personal sanctity, and unselfishness to reform the Church of the evils and abuses so prevalent among the clergy and the nobles of the times. He is remembered as a model priest and bishop, exhibiting great simplicity, piety, generosity, and self-sacrifice. His example reminds us today of the need for reform, the need to embrace the doctrine of the Church, and call to self-sacrifice for the expiation of the sins of those in need.


Pope Paul V said of Saint Charles: “The Lord alone performs great wonders and in recent times He has accomplished marvelous things among Us. In His wonderful dispensation He has set a great light on the Apostolic rock when He singled Charles out of the heart of the Roman Church as the faithful priest and good servant to be a model for the pastors and their flock. He enlightened the whole Church from the light diffused by his holy works. He shone forth before priests and people as innocent as Abel, pure as Enoch, tireless as Jacob, meek as Moses, and zealous as Elias. Surrounded by luxury, he exhibited the austerity of Jerome, the humility of Martin, the pastoral zeal of Gregory, the liberty of Ambrose, and the charity of Paulinus. In a word, he was a man we could see with our eyes and touch with our hands. He trampled earthly things underfoot and lived the life of the spirit. Although the world tried to entice him he lived crucified to the world. He constantly sought after heavenly things, not only because he held the office of an angel but all because even on earth he tried to think and act as an angel.”



Selected Quotation of Saint Charles Borromeo

“I admit that we are all weak, but if we want help, the Lord God has given us the means to find it easily. Would you like me to teach you how to grow from virtue to virtue and how, if you are already recollected at prayer, you can be even more attentive next time, and so give God more pleasing worship? Listen, and I will tell you. If a tiny spark of God’s love already burns within you, do not expose it to the wind, for it may get blown out. Keep the stove tightly shut so that it will not lose its heat and grow cold. In other words, avoid distractions as well as you can. Stay quiet with God. Do not spend your time in useless chatter. If teaching and preaching is your job, then study diligently and apply yourself to whatever is necessary for doing the job well. Be sure that you first preach by the way you live. If you do not, people will notice that you say one thing, but live otherwise, and your words will bring only cynical laughter and a derisive shake of the head. We must meditate before, during and after everything we do. The prophet says: “I will pray, and then I will understand.” This is the way we can easily overcome the countless difficulties we have to face day after day, which, after all, are part of our work. In meditation we find the strength to bring Christ to birth in ourselves and in other men.”



We beseech Thee, O Lord, keep Thy Church under the continual protection of Saint Charles Thy Confessor and Bishop; and as his pastoral care made him glorious, so may we through his intercession every grow in fervor of love for Thee. Amen.


Year 2: Day 308 of 365
Prayer Intentions: Strength to Self-Sacrifice for the sins of others; Church reform; Patience; Humility; Single-mindedness in serving the Lord

Requested Intentions: Restoration of a marriage (A); Peace and tolerance in a family, support for those with Parkinson’s Disease (M); For the restoration of a daughter’s marriage, end to debt (S); Employment and continued strength (K); Successful examinations for a son (J); Employment and blessings of a child (S); Employment and financial security (F); Successful work placement, continued health (A); Grace and healing for a family (P); Healing of a father (M); Academic success for son, employment for husband and brother (B); Freedom from anxiety and panic attacks (R); Health and healing in preparation for surgery (C); Healing of a chronic illness (P); Safety of a family during storms (A); Successful home ownership (P); Healing of a marriage (M); Employment for a husband, blessings for a marriage (E); Successful examinations for a daughter, healing of a relationships (V); Blessing for a family (V); Healing of baby girl M and all children suffering (M); Special intentions (R); Business success, peace, health (E); Conversion and deliverance of those who suffer, increase in vocations (M); Financial security and safe housing (M); For a daughter (K).

September 12: Saint Guy of Anderlecht

Posted by Jacob

Today, September 12, we celebrate the feast day of Saint Guy of Anderlecht (also Saint Guido, 950-1012), a Belgian Christian known as the “Poor Man of Anderlecht.” Saint Guy was poor in material possessions throughout his life, but rich in the love, generosity, and grace of God. He worked tirelessly at the most menial of tasks, and gained a reputation for almsgiving, despite his own lack of the most basic needs. Although he never joined a particular religious order, Saint Guy was visited for spiritual direction by many, and through his model, brought many closer to Christ.


Born in Anderlecht, Belgian, a small village outside of Brussels, Guy was raised and instructed by poor, but pious parents. From an early age, he demonstrated great devotion to the Lord, and to Our Blessed Mother Mary. He proclaimed while still a child his wish to count himself among the special flock of Christ—the poor—for his entire life, and dedicated himself to a life of poverty and service to those who had nothing. Throughout his childhood, he gave away all he had, and spent his days visiting the sick and elderly of the town. It is said that when he worked the fields of his parents, an angel came and pushed the plow so that he might better pray undisturbed. Guy came to be recognized as a saint by many!

As Guy matured, his devotion only multiplied. He spent hours in prayer each day, rarely sleeping but instead contemplating the Lord. He traveled frequently to the church of Our Lady at Laeken, outside Brussels, and demonstrated such devotion to Mary that the priest approached him, and asked him to stay and serve the Church. It was with tremendous joy that Saint Guy remained in the church, constantly cleaning, sweeping, polishing the altars, and attending to the most menial needs during the day—stopping only to befriend and serve those who were poor and came on foot to the church looking for assistance. Each night he spent in prayer, rarely sleeping, but instead could be found kneeling at the foot of the cross, praying for the poor.

Chapel of Saint Guy
After many years of service, a savvy merchant from Brussels sought to take advantage of Guy, and offering him a share of his business, convinced him that through making more money, he could help more people. Guy wished nothing more than to remain in the church, but he saw the benefit in helping others and left his post. Almost immediately the business failed, and Guy, realizing his mistake, returned to the church only to find his position filled. Guy engaged in severe acts of penance for the remainder of his life, offering all he had to the Lord for his inconstancy. He traveled on pilgrimage—on foot—for seven years, visiting Rome and then the Holy Land, returning to Belgium and serving as a guide at the holy shrines.

A merchant of Brussels, hearing of the generosity of this humble sacristan, was prompted by a demon to go to Laeken and offer him a share of his business, telling him he would have the means thereby to give more to the poor. Guy had no desire to leave the church, but the offer seemed providential and he accepted it. The first ship bearing a cargo in which Guy had an interest, however, was lost, and he realized he had made a mistake. When he returned to Laeken, he found his place at the church filled. The rest of his life was one long penance for his inconstancy. For seven years he made pilgrimages of penance, visiting Rome and the Holy Land and other famous shrines.

Eventually, in his early 60s, Guy returned to Anderlecht, and died soon thereafter. In death, a golden light shone around him, and a heavenly voice was heard my many, proclaiming his eternal reward in heaven. He was buried in Anderlecht, and many miracles were attributed to his intercession at his grave. Saint Guy is the patron saint of Anderlecht, animals with horns, bachelors, convulsive children, epileptics, laborers, protection of outbuildings, protection of sheds, protection of stables, sacristans, sextons, work horses; and is invoked against epilepsy, against rabies, against infantile convulsions, and against mad dogs.




Year 2: Day 253 of 365
Prayer Intentions: Lives of charity, constancy, and devotion to the Lord
Requested Intentions: Clear speech for a child (C); Conversion of a family (A); Successful employment (S); For the healing of impaired vision (F); For a couple experiencing difficulties (L); Successful employment after finishing college (M); Mother’s health (A); Financial security, freedom from anxiety (S); For a son and cousins (L); Peace and civility (B); Successful examination results (D); Safety of family, strength, courage, wisdom (C); For the souls of a departed father and brother, finding of a suitable marriage partner (R); Successful pilgrimage, deepening of prayer life (R); Restoration of health (J); Restoration of health (S); Freedom from pride (A); For children and marriage (M); For the birth of a healthy baby (Y); For personal family intentions, for the sick, poor, hungry, and homeless (G); Financial security and peace (J); Grace, peace, and obedience to the will of God in a marriage (H); Successful and blessed marriage for sin, freedom from anxiety for husband, spiritual contentedness for family (N); Employment and health for a husband (B); Recovery and health of a mother (J); For a family to grow closer to the Church, salvation for all children (D); Successful employment (L); Successful employment (S); Renewal of faith life (A); Support for an intended marriage, health for friend and aunt (J); Mental health assistance for son (G); Freedom from illness (S); Successful employment (C).

September 7: Saint Clodoald

Posted by Jacob

Today, September 7, we celebrate the feast day of Saint Clodoald (also known as Saint Cloud, 522-560), a noble man born into privilege and royalty who renounced his life of ease for one of service to the Lord. Saint Cloud reminds us that our daily choices allow us to grow closer to, or further from, the great plan and gifts that the Lord has in store for us. By accepting God’s Will for us, we are able to better serve others, becoming a part of the grace and love of the Lord.


Clodoald was born in 552, the grandson of King Clovis the First of France. He was named after the city of the same name, suggested by the city-plotter, and foretelling of his life of humility and humble service. Clodoald was raised in Paris by his grandmother, Saint Clotilde, who instructed he and his two brothers—Theodoald and Gunther—in the ways of the faith. Clodoald and his brothers were also being groomed for the throne, with the area of control of their grandfather to be split amongst them. However, sadness and bitter family rivalry was to prevent that as the boys’ uncle, Clotaire I, had Clodoad’s brothers assassinated. Clodoald managed to escape to Provence, and drawn to a more contemplative life, renounced all claims to the throne.

In Provence, Clodoald found a mentor in Saint Severinus of Noricum, and lived and studied with him as a disciple for eleven years. Over time, he became known for his gentleness, humility, and counsel, and many visited him for spiritual direction and healing. Remembering the excess of his upbringing, Clodoald gave all he had to those in need, but gradually felt the need to return to society. Returning to Paris, he was received with joy, and at the urging of the people, was ordained a priest by Bishop Eusebius. As a priest, he went about his daily tasks with profound humility, diligence, and impact on those he encountered.

Saint Clodoald established a holy place at Nogent-sur-Seine that is now a collegiate church of canons regular called Saint Cloud. His relics are venerated there, whereas the village hosting his tomb has been renamed in his honor.



Today, as we celebrate the feast of Saint Clodoald, we pray for the acceptance of God’s Will in our own lives.

Prayer for Acceptance of God’s Will

Lord, teach me to be patient - with life, with people, and with myself. I sometimes try to hurry things along too much, and I push for answers before the time is right. Teach me to trust Your sense of timing rather than my own and to surrender my will to Your greater and wiser plan. Help me let life unfold slowly, like the small rosebud whose petals unravel bit by bit, and remind me that in hurrying the bloom along, I destroy the bud and much of the beauty therein.


Instead, let me wait for all to unfold in its own time. Each moment and state of growth contains a loveliness. Teach me to slow down enough to appreciate life and all it holds. Amen.

July 4: Blessed Pier Giorgio Frassanti , "The Man of the Beatitudes"

Posted by Jacob

"Verso l’alto" ("Always upward!") --the motto of Blessed Pier Giorgio Frassanti

Today, July 4, we celebrate the feast day of Blessed Pier Giorgio Frassanti (1901-1925), known as “The Man of the Eight Beatitudes.” Pope John Paul II said of Pier at his Beatification: “By his example he proclaims that a life lived in Christ's Spirit, the Spirit of the Beatitudes, is "blessed", and that only the person who becomes a "man or woman of the Beatitudes" can succeed in communicating love and peace to others. He repeats that it is really worth giving up everything to serve the Lord. He testifies that holiness is possible for everyone, and that only the revolution of charity can enkindle the hope of a better future in the hearts of people.”

Father Martin Stanislaus Gillet, O.P., Master-General of the Order of the Friars Preachers, and the man who enrolled Pier Giorgio into the Dominicans said of him:

“At an age in which the passions bubble in the hearts of young people and threaten to break all bounds, Pier Giorgio concentrated his vital forces and kept them in balance. Day by day, in front of God and men, he learned to conquer himself and to master himself. It would have to be said that, without realizing it, he was preparing for leadership; for it is true that, in order to know how to lead the others, first of all one must know how to lead oneself.


The designs of God are incomprehensible, because He sees things from so much higher and so much further than we: both in general and in particular. But it is permissible to think that, by calling to Himself Pier Giorgio, in the moment in which so many had placed their hopes in him, God intends that his unexpected death, which has caught us unawares, may put in relief the beauty of his life, and that it may attract the attention of you, the young people who will be able to take of inspiration from it.”



Pier Giorgio Frassati was born in Turin, Italy on Holy Saturday, 6 April 1901, to well known and wealthy parents. His father, Alfredo Frassati, founded the Italian newspaper, La Stampa, and his mother, Adelaide Ametis, was a well-known painter. The life of Blessed Pier was recorded by his sister, who wrote his biography. In her words, from an early age, Pier demonstrated immense compassion for all life, particularly the poor and needy. She tells the story of Pier Giorgio, who as a child once answered the door of the family home to find a mother begging with her son who was shoeless. Without hesitation, Pier Giorgio gave the boy his own shoes. As a child, Pier Giorgio would frequently give his train fare away to the poor, and then run back home.

Not only gifted with compassion, Pier was a robust boy who was full of life. Handsome and charming, he excelled at school, sports, and was the center of his social circle. Like many of the wealthy of Turin, he was an avid mountain climber, stating repeatedly that the higher he climbed, the closer he felt to the Lord. Praying the Rosary as he climbed, he would call out, "Higher and higher-there you can hear the voice of Christ!" He frequently theatre and museums, and was well-cultured and well-liked by all he encountered. Despite his popularity, he was especially devoted to his faith, and brought many of his friends to Church with him.

At age 17, Pier Giorgio joined the Society of Saint Vincent de Paul, to better allow him to serve others. He had made the decision to become a mining engineer “to serve Christ better among the miners,” in his own words. After graduation from high school, his father presented him with the choice of gifts: a new car or money. Pier Giorgio took the money, and then promptly distributed it to the poor, much to his father’s dismay. He undertook further acts of charity, finding homes for the homeless, medical care for the sick, and providing for needy children out of his own pocket. Pier Giorgio kept a detailed ledger of his money, and where it was going, and his continued charitable acts only became known to his family upon his deathbed when he instructed his sister to continue caring for those who depended upon his assistance. Pier’s friends questioned how he could stomach the stench of the slums he visited, he responded, "It’s to Jesus I go. Jesus comes to me every morning in Holy Communion and I repay Him in a very small way by visiting the poor. All around the sick and all around the poor I see a special light which we do not have." Pier Giorgio received the Eucharist every day, and spent the majority of his nights in sleepless prayer and adoration.

In 1922, at the age of 21, Pier Giorgio became a member of the Third Order of the Dominicans taking as his name Girolamo (Saint Jerome), the Dominican preacher and reformer. He became involved with Catholic youth and student groups, the Apostleship of Prayer, and Catholic Action. Along with his own direct service to the poor, he was active in causes for political reform. He said, "Charity is not enough: we need social reform." To this end, he helped to establish the Catholic daily newspaper Momento, which was based on Rerum Novarum, the encyclical in which St Leo XIII articulated principles of social and economic justice.

Pier Giorgio was strongly anti-fascist and did little to hide his political views. Participating in a Church-organized demonstration in Rome, he withstood police violence and rallied the other young people by grabbing the banner which the police had knocked out of someone else's hands. He held it even higher while using the pole to ward off their blows. When the demonstrators were arrested by the police, he refused special treatment that he might have received because of his father's political position, preferring to stay with his friends. Pier Giorgio was such an outspoken advocate for the poor and needy, one night a group of fascists broke into his family's home to attack him and his father, but he beat them off single-handedly chasing them down the street.

Blessed Pier Giorgio frequently said "God gives us health so that we may serve the sick." He visited invalids in hospitals and at home, bringing medicine and food. In late June, 1925, at the young age of 24, Pier Giorgio fell acutely ill with poliomyelitis (polio), an illness he had contracted while ministering to the sick and poor. He died on July 4, 1925 at the age of 24, after many days of excruciating pain. As Pier lay on his death-bed, he handed his sister Luciana some pawn tickets to redeem for some of the poor. His last note, written with a nearly paralyzed hand, concerned the Converso family, who depended on him to pay for shots. Thousands of residents of Turin, knowing of his seven years of service to the poor—and many of them having been personally assisted by him-- stood in the streets to pay respects as the cortege passed. The steps for his canonization began immediately, and in 1990, Pope John Paul II beatified him. Canonization procedures remain in progress.

The relics of Blessed Pier Giorgio were buried, and later exhumed to be translated to the Cathedral of Turin in 1981. At that time, his body was found to be perfectly incorrupt. "When they opened Pier Giorgio´s tomb in 1981, his body was perfectly preserved," recalled one witness. "He had a smile on his face and a rosary in his hands. It was like meeting him for the first time." To this day, his body remains incorrupt, and was recently transported for veneration to World Youth Day in Australia, prior to returning to the Cathedral of Turin.


Father, You gave to the young Pier Giorgio Frassati the joy of meeting Christ and of living his faith in service of the poor and the sick. Through his intercession, may we, too, walk the path of the Beatitudes and follow the example of his generosity, spreading the spirit of the Gospel in society. We ask this through Christ our Lord. Amen.



Selected Quotations of Blessed Pier Giorgio Frassati

"I urge you with all the strength of my soul to approach the Eucharist Table as often as possible. Feed on this Bread of the Angels from which you will draw the strength to fight inner struggles."

“Our life, in order to be Christian, has to be a continual renunciation, a continual sacrifice. But this is not difficult, if one thinks what these few years passed in suffering are, compared with eternal happiness where joy will have no measure or end, and where we shall have unimaginable peace.”

"All around the sick and all around the poor I see a special light which we do not have."

“What wealth it is to be in good health, as we are! But we have the duty of putting our health at the service of those who do not have it. To act otherwise would be to betray that gift of God.”

"You ask me whether I am in good spirits. How could I not be, so long as my trust in God gives me strength. We must always be cheerful. Sadness should be banished from all Christian souls. For suffering is a far different thing from sadness, which is the worst disease of all. It is almost always caused by lack of Faith. But the purpose for which we have been created shows us the path along which we should go, perhaps strewn with many thorns, but not a sad path. Even in the midst of intense suffering it is one of joy."


"Each of you knows that the foundation of our faith is charity. Without it, our religion would crumble. We will never be truly Catholic unless we conform our entire lives to the two commandments that are the essence of the Catholic faith: to love the Lord, our God, with all our strength, and to love our neighbor as ourselves... With charity, we sow the seeds of that true peace which only our faith in Jesus Christ can give us by making us all brothers and sisters. I know that this way is steep, and difficult, and strewn with thorns, while at first glance the other path seems easier, more pleasant, and more satisfying. But the fact is, if we could look into the hearts of those who follow the perverse paths of this world, we would see that they lack the serenity that comes to those who have faced a thousand difficulties and who have renounced material pleasure to follow God's law."

"Come, and your every sacrifice will be repaid in heaven, because Jesus Christ promises that everything we do for the poor in His name, we do for Him. You do not want to deny Christ this love, He whose infinite love for humanity gave Himself to us in the sacrament of the Eucharist, as our Comforter and the Bread of Life."

"A Catholic cannot help but be happy; sadness should be banished from their souls. Suffering is not sadness, which is the worst disease. This disease is almost always caused by atheism, but the end for which we are created guides us along life's pathway, which may be strewn with thorns, but is not sad. It is happy even through suffering."


"May peace reign in your soul... any other gift we possess in this life is vanity, just as all the things of this world are vain."

"In order to be Christian, our lives must be a continual renunciation and sacrifice. However, we know that the difficulties of this world are nothing compared to the eternal happiness that awaits us, where there will be no limit to our joy, no end to our happiness, and we shall enjoy unimaginable peace. And so, young people, learn from our Lord Jesus Christ the meaning of sacrifice."

"We who, by the grace of God, are Catholics, must not squander the best years of our lives as so many unhappy young people do, who worry about enjoying the good things in life, things that do not in fact bring any good, but rather the fruit of immorality in today's world. We must prepare ourselves to be ready and able to handle the struggles we will have to endure to fulfill our goals, and, in so doing, to give our country happier and morally healthier days in the near future. But in order for this to happen we need the following: constant prayer to obtain God's grace, without which all our efforts are in vain; organization and discipline to be ready for action at the right moment; and finally, we need to sacrifice our own passions, indeed our very selves, because without this sacrifice we will never achieve our goal."


"When you are totally consumed by the Eucharistic fire, then you will be able more consciously to thank God, who has called you to become part of His family. Then you will enjoy the peace that those who are happy in this world have never experienced, because true happiness, oh young people, does not consist in the pleasures of this world, or in earthly things, but in peace of conscience, which we only have if we are pure of heart and mind."

"In God's marvelous plan, Divine Providence often uses the tiniest twigs to do good works... What would life be without acts of charity?"

"Foolish is he who follows the pleasures of this world, because these are always fleeting and bring much pain. The only true pleasure is that which comes to us through faith."

"We are living through difficult days because the persecution against the Church is raging more than ever, but this should not frighten you, brave and good young people. Always remember that the Church is a divine institution and it cannot come to an end."

"I ask you to pray a lot for me, because I desperately need from God the grace to carry out my projects to good effect... Only prayers can obtain from God the desired improvement."

"The faith given to me in baptism suggests to me surely: by yourself you will do nothing, but if you have God as the center of all your action, then you will reach the goal."

"In a world gone astray from God there is no peace, but it also lacks charity, which is true and perfect love... Nothing is more beautiful than love. Indeed, faith and hope will end when we die, whereas love, that is, charity, will last for eternity; if anything, I think it will be even more alive in the next life!"

"With every day that passes, I grow more and more convinced how ugly the world is, of how much suffering there is, and, unfortunately, of how it is the good who suffer the most. Meanwhile, we who have been given so many of God's blessings have repaid Him poorly. This is an awful reality that racks my brain; while I'm studying, every so often I ask myself: will I continue on the right path? Will I have the strength to persevere all the way? In the face of this pang of doubt, the faith given to me in Baptism reassures me of this: by yourself, you will accomplish nothing, but if you place God at the center of all your actions, then you will reach the goal."

"To live without faith, without a heritage to defend, without battling constantly for truth, is not to live but to 'get along'; we must never just 'get along'." "By drawing closer to the poor, little by little we become their confidants and counselors in the worst moments of this earthly pilgrimage. We can give them the comforting words of faith and often we succeed, not by our own merit, in putting on the right road people who have strayed without meaning to. Witnessing daily the faith with which some families often bear the worst suffering, their constant sacrifices, and that they do all this for the love of God, often makes us ask why we, who have received so many things from God, have been so neglectful, so bad, while they, who have not been as privileged, are so much better? And so we resolve in our conscience to follow the Way of the Cross, the only way that leads to eternal life."


"It is a difficult battle, but we must strive to win it and to rediscover our small road to Damascus in order to walk toward the destination to which we all must arrive... What is clear is that faith is the only anchor of salvation and we must hold tightly to it: without it, what would our lives be? Nothing, or rather, wasted, because in life there is only suffering, and suffering without faith is unbearable. But suffering that is nourished by the flame of faith becomes something beautiful, because it tempers the soul to deal with suffering."


"I hope that by the grace of God I will continue to follow these Catholic ideals so that one day, in the way God wishes, I will be able to preserve and promote these truths."

“One ought to go and one goes. It is not those who suffer violence that should fear, but those who practice it. When God is with us, we do not need to be afraid.”

"Charity is not enough: we need social reform."

"When God is with us, we do not need to be afraid."