Tuesday, April 30, 2013

Saint Joseph the Worker and Communism



The feast of St. Joseph the Worker was established by Pope Pius XII in 1955 in order to Christianize the concept of labor and give to all workmen a model and a protector. By the daily labor in his shop, offered to God with patience and joy, St. Joseph provided for the necessities of his holy spouse and of the Incarnate Son of God, and thus became an example to all laborers. "Workmen and all those laboring in conditions of poverty will have reasons to rejoice rather than grieve, since they have in common with the Holy Family daily preoccupations and cares"(Leo XIII).

St. Joseph the Worker

"May Day" has long been dedicated to labor and the working man. It falls on the first day of the month that is dedicated to the Blessed Virgin Mary. Pope Pius XII expressed the hope that this feast would accentuate the dignity of labor and would bring a spiritual dimension to labor unions. It is eminently fitting that St. Joseph, a working man who became the foster-father of Christ and patron of the universal Church, should be honored on this day.The texts of the Mass and the Liturgy of the Hours provide a catechetical synthesis of the significance of human labor seen in the light of faith. The Opening Prayer states that God, the creator and ruler of the universe, has called men and women in every age to develop and use their talents for the good of others. The Office of Readings, taken from the document of the Second Vatican Council on the Church in the modern world, develops this idea. In every type of labor we are obeying the command of God given in Genesis 2:15 and repeated in the responsory for the Office of Readings. The responsory for the Canticle of Zechariah says that "St. Joseph faithfully practiced the carpenter's trade. He is a shining example for all workers." Then, in the second part of the Opening Prayer, we ask that we may do the work that God has asked of us and come to the rewards he has promised. In the Prayer after Communion we ask: "May our lives manifest your love; may we rejoice for ever in your peace."The liturgy for this feast vindicates the right to work, and this is a message that needs to be heard and heeded in our modern society. In many of the documents issued by Pope John XXIII, Pope Paul VI, the Second Vatican Council and Pope John Paul II, reference is made to the Christian spirit that should permeate one's work, after the example of St. Joseph. In addition to this, there is a special dignity and value to the work done in caring for the family. The Office of Readings contains an excerpt from the Vatican II document on the modern world: "Where men and women, in the course of gaining a livelihood for themselves and their families, offer appropriate service to society, they can be confident that their personal efforts promote the work of the Creator, confer benefits on their fellowmen, and help to realize God's plan in history" (no. 34).
— Excerpted from Saints of the Roman Calendar by Enzo Lodi

Patron: Against doubt; against hesitation; Americas; Austria; diocese of Baton Rouge, California; Belgium; diocese of Biloxi, Mississippi; Bohemia; diocese of Buffalo, New York; bursars; cabinetmakers; Canada; Carinthia; carpenters; China; Church; confectioners; craftsmen; Croatian people (in 1687 by decree of the Croatian parliament) dying people; emigrants; engineers; expectant mothers; families; fathers; Florence, Italy; happy death; holy death; house hunters; immigrants; interior souls; Korea; laborers; diocese of La Crosse, Wisconsin; archdiocese of Louisville, Kentucky; diocese of Manchester, New Hampshire; married people; Mexico; diocese of Nashville, Tennessee; New France; New World; Oblates of Saint Joseph; people in doubt; people who fight Communism; Peru; pioneers; pregnant women; protection of the Church; diocese of San Jose, California; Sicily; diocese of Sioux Falls, South Dakota; social justice; Styria, Austria; travellers; Turin, Italy; Tyrol, Austria; unborn children; Universal Church; Vatican II; Vietnam; diocese of Wheeling-Charleston, West Virginia; wheelwrights; workers; working people.

Symbols: Bible; branch; capenter's square; carpenter's tools; chalice; cross; hand tools; infant Jesus; ladder; lamb; lily; monstrance; old man holding a lily and a carpenter's tool such as a square; old man holding the infant Jesus; plane; rod.

Things to Do:
  • May 1 is celebrated in Communist countries as the Day of the International Solidarity of Workers. Today would be a good day to pray for athesistic Communism's influence to cease and a proper application of the principles explained by Leo XIII in Rerum novarum and John Paul II in Centesimus annus to be the guide used by nations.
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Taken from: http://www.catholicculture.org/culture/liturgicalyear/calendar/day.cfm?date=2013-05-01

"We can turn this world into a garden, or reduce it to a pile of rubble".



PRAYER OF ENTRUSTMENT TO THE VIRGIN MARY

Delivered by John Paul II in St. Peter's Square
 

VATICAN CITY, OCT. 8, 2000 (ZENIT.org) - Here is a translation of the prayer that Pope John Paul II used to entrust the world and the millennium to Mary.

1. "Woman, behold your Son!" (John 19:26). As we near the end of this Jubilee Year, when you, O Mother, have offered us Jesus anew, the blessed fruit of your womb most pure, the Word made flesh, the world's Redeemer, we hear more clearly the sweet echo of his words entrusting us to you, making you our Mother: "Woman, behold your Son!"
When he entrusted to you the Apostle John, and with him the children of the Church and all people, Christ did not diminish but affirmed anew the role which is his alone as the Savior of the world. You are the splendor which in no way dims the light of Christ, for you exist in him and through him.
Everything in you is fiat: you are the Immaculate One, through you there shines the fullness of grace. Here, then, are your children, gathered before you at the dawn of the new millennium.
The Church today, through the voice of the Successor of Peter, in union with so many Pastors assembled here from every corner of the world, seeks refuge in your motherly protection and trustingly begs your intercession as she faces the challenges which lie hidden in the future.
2. In this year of grace, countless people have known the overflowing joy of the mercy which the Father has given us in Christ. In the particular Churches throughout the world, and still more in this center of Christianity, the widest array of people have accepted this gift.
Here the enthusiasm of the young rang out, here the sick have lifted up their prayer.
Here have gathered priests and religious, artists and journalists, workers and people of learning, children and adults, and all have acknowledged in your beloved Son the Word of God made flesh in your womb.
O Mother, intercede for us, that the fruits of this Year will not be lost and that the seeds of grace will grow to the full measure of the holiness to which we are all called.
3. Today we wish to entrust to you the future that awaits us, and we ask you to be with us on our way.
We are the men and women of an extraordinary time, exhilarating yet full of contradictions.
Humanity now has instruments of unprecedented power: We can turn this world into a garden, or reduce it to a pile of rubble.
We have devised the astounding capacity to intervene in the very well-springs of life: Man can use this power for good, within the bounds of the moral law, or he can succumb to the shortsighted pride of a science which accepts no limits, but tramples on the respect due to every human being.
Today as never before in the past, humanity stands at a crossroads.
And once again, O Virgin Most Holy, salvation lies fully and uniquely in Jesus, your Son.
4. Therefore, O Mother, like the Apostle John, we wish to take you into our home (cf. John 19:27), that we may learn from you to become like your Son.
"Woman, behold your children!"
Here we stand before you to entrust to your maternal care ourselves, the Church, the entire world.
Plead for us with your beloved Son that he may give us in abundance the Holy Spirit, the Spirit of truth which is the fountain of life.
Receive the Spirit for us and with us, as happened in the first community gathered round you in Jerusalem on the day of Pentecost (cf. Acts 1:14).
May the Spirit open our hearts to justice and love, and guide people and nations to mutual understanding and a firm desire for peace.
We entrust to you all people, beginning with the weakest: the babies yet unborn, and those born into poverty and suffering, the young in search of meaning, the unemployed, and those suffering hunger and disease.
We entrust to you all troubled families, the elderly with no one to help them, and all who are alone and without hope.
5. O Mother, you know the sufferings and hopes of the Church and the world: Come to the aid of your children in the daily trials which life brings to each one, and grant that, thanks to the efforts of all, the darkness will not prevail over the light.
To you, Dawn of Salvation, we commit our journey through the new millennium, so that with you as guide all people may know Christ, the light of the world and its only Savior, who reigns with the Father and the Holy Spirit for ever and ever. Amen.

[Original text: Italian]

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Taken from: http://www.autentico.org/oa09485.php

Thursday, April 25, 2013

" ... true peace, profound peace, comes from the experience of God's mercy".



Pope Francis on Divine Mercy Sunday


By David Came (Apr 7, 2013)


In the first Divine Mercy Sunday message of his pontificate, on April 7 in St. Peter's Square, Pope Francis gave a powerful teaching on God's mercy based on the Gospel of the day, John 20:19-31. He spoke of how "true peace ... comes from the experience of God's mercy," of Jesus Christ revealing Himself to us as "Mercy Incarnate," and of our call to boldly "proclaim Christ the Risen Lord" by "trusting in the mercy of the Lord forever."
Pope Francis also emphasized how Blessed John Paul II established Divine Mercy Sunday as a universal feast day and then died on its vigil.
"Today," Pope Francis said, "is Divine Mercy Sunday, by the will of Blessed John Paul II, who closed his eyes to the world on the vigil of this [feast day]."
He delivered his message in the Square before an estimated crowd of 50,000 people after praying the Regina Caeli, according to the online news service AsiaNews.
Of the Risen Lord's Easter gift of peace to His disciples and its connection with Divine Mercy, Pope Francis said:
I renew to everyone the Easter greetings with the words of the Risen Jesus: "Peace be with you!" It is not a greeting, or even a simple wish: it is a gift, indeed, the precious gift that Christ gives to his disciples after passing through death and the underworld. He gives peace, as he had promised, "Peace I leave with you; my peace I give to you. Not as the world gives do I give it to you." This peace is the fruit of the victory of God over evil, it is the fruit of forgiveness. And so it is: true peace, profound peace, comes from the experience of God's mercy.
Notice here how Pope Francis teaches us that this Easter gift of peace, which "comes from the experience of God's mercy," is "the fruit of the victory of God over evil" and "the fruit of forgiveness." Thus, our Holy Father shows us the great power of Divine Mercy that is revealed in the Paschal mystery, as God has victory over evil and offers us forgiveness for our sins.
In describing Jesus Christ as "Mercy Incarnate," Pope Francis stresses our need to believe in Him and His love and mercy for us even though — unlike the Apostle Thomas in the day's Gospel — we have not had the opportunity to see the Risen Lord and examine His wounds:
The second time, eight days later, Thomas was also there. And Jesus said to him, invited him to look at the wounds, to touch them, and Thomas exclaimed, "My Lord, my God." Jesus said: "Have you come to believe because you have seen me? Blessed are those who have not seen and have believed." And who were those who believed without seeing? The other disciples, the men and women of Jerusalem who, despite not having met the risen Jesus, believed the testimony of the Apostles and the women. This is a very important word on faith, we can call it the beatitude of faith. Blessed are those who have not seen and have believed. At all times
and in all places blessed are those who, through the Word of God proclaimed in the Church and witnessed by Christians believe that Jesus Christ is the incarnate love of God, Mercy Incarnate. And that goes for all of us.
Here, Pope Francis is saying that the key to our personal relationship with the Lord Jesus Christ is our faith and trust in Him, as we are called to live by faith and not by sight. Through the eyes of faith, we are invited to a personal encounter with Him as Mercy Incarnate. In this light, it makes perfect sense Jesus told St. Faustina that we are asked to personally sign the Divine Mercy image with the words, "Jesus, I trust in You" (Diary of St. Faustina, 47).
Finally, Pope Francis connects the dots. It's almost as if he has the Divine Mercy image in view as he encourages us to boldly witness to our faith in the Risen Lord by "trusting in the mercy of the Lord":
... the Spirit of the Risen Christ casts out fear from the hearts of the apostles and pushes them out of the Upper Room, to bring the Gospel. We also must have more courage to witness to faith in the Risen Christ! Let us not be afraid to be Christian and live as Christians! We must have the courage to go out and proclaim Christ the Risen Lord, for he is our peace. "Trusting in the mercy of the Lord forever, because he is waiting for us, he loves us."
So, be encouraged by Pope Francis to boldly proclaim and live your faith in the Risen Christ. As you do, join me in praying, "Jesus, I trust in You!" And give thanks to the Merciful Savior for Pope Francis, who is our new Mercy Pope.

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Taken from: http://thedivinemercy.org/news/story.php?NID=5327

Thursday, April 18, 2013

Pope's Pontificate to be consecrated to Our Lady of Fatima on May 13th


 
2013-04-18 16:33:28 Printable version Printable version




YoutubeApril 18, 2013. (Romereports.com) Just hours after being elected, Pope Francis asked Portuguese Cardinal José Policarpo for a special request. The Pope asked the patriarch of Lisbon to consecrate his pontificate to Our Lady of Fatima.

In the month of April, Portuguese bishops held their annual meeting, where they all agreed to carry out the consecration ceremony together.

The celebration will held on May 13th and it will be led by Cardinal Policarpo, who also serves as the president of Portugal's Episcopal Conference. The bishops have also invited pilgrims to take part in the ceremony to honor the 'Pope's pastoral service.'
 
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Sunday, April 7, 2013

Pope Benedict on the Church's Marian Doctrine



Scott P. Richert

By , About.com GuideOctober 15, 2010
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On Monday, October 11, 2010, at the opening session of the Seventh General Congregation of the Special Assembly for the Middle East of the Synod of Bishops, Pope Benedict XVI delivered a rare unscripted homily that may well be seen by future generations as one of the defining moments of his pontificate. In just under 2,200 words, the Holy Father demonstrated the depth of his theological understanding, explaining in simple terms the Church's Marian doctrine, Her understanding of the historical centrality of the Incarnation, the role of the Church throughout history, the false gods of the past and the present who stand in the way of the Church as She attempts to fulfill her mission, and the source of the Church's strength that will ultimately lead to Her triumph.
The homily is so rich that I intend to examine it in parts over the next few days. We'll begin, as Pope Benedict did, with his exposition of the Church's Marian doctrine.
October 11 was, in the traditional calendar, the feast of the Divine Maternity of Mary, and Pope Benedict noted that, when Pope John XXIII opened the Second Vatican Council on this day in 1962, he "wanted to entrust the entire council to the motherly hands, to the motherly heart of the Virgin Mary." The feast was introduced by Pope Pius XI to commemorate the declaration, at the Council of Ephesus (431), that the term Theotokos—Mother of God—was properly applied to the Virgin Mary. In this declaration, "the Council of Ephesus had summarized the entire doctrine on Christ, on Mary, the entire doctrine of the redemption."
God became man, through the humble and loving action of the Virgin Mary in accepting God's will. In allowing God to become incarnate in her, the Mother of God was "drawn by the Lord into himself, and so all of us with her."
But Mary's role in the divine plan of salvation did not end with the birth of Christ. As Pope Benedict notes, at the end of the Second Vatican Council, "Pope Paul VI acknowledged the Virgin Mary with the title 'Mater Ecclesiae'" (Mother of the Church):
Because Christ was not born as an individual among others. He was born to create a body for himself: he was born - as John says in chapter 12 of his Gospel - to draw all things to him and in him. He was born - as the letters to the Colossians and to the Ephesians say - to recapitulate all the world, he was born as the first-born of many brothers, he was born to reunite the cosmos in himself, such that he is the head of a great body. Where Christ is born, there begins the movement of recapitulation, the moment of the calling, of the construction of his body, of the holy Church. The Mother of "Theós," the Mother of God, is Mother of the Church, because she is Mother of the one who came to reunite all in his risen body.
We can see how the two titles, Theotokos and Mater Ecclesiae, are really one and the same, the Holy Father says, by examining the "parallelism between the first chapter of [Saint Luke's] Gospel and the first chapter of the Acts of the Apostles, which repeat the same mystery on two levels." In Luke 1, Mary accepts the will of God at the Annunciation, and Christ is conceived by the power of the Holy Spirit. In Acts 1, Mary is in the Upper Room with the disciples at Pentecost, "imploring the cloud of the Holy Spirit":
And so from the believing Church, with Mary at the center, is born the Church, the body of Christ. This twofold birth is the one birth of the Christus totus, of the Christ who embraces the world and us all.
If there has been a better, more succinct statement of the Church's Marian doctrine, I'm unaware of it. And remember, this was an unscripted homily, delivered without notes of any kind.
In my next post, we'll examine Pope Benedict's similarly succinct yet profound examination of the centrality of the Incarnation. In the meantime, you can read an English translation of the transcription of the homily on the indispensable Chiesa News website.
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Last week, I examined Pope Benedict's discussion of the Church's Marian doctrine in an unscripted homily at the opening session of the Seventh General Congregation of the Special Assembly for the Middle East of the Synod of Bishops. My post, however, barely scratched the surface of this remarkably deep homily. Among other things, Pope Benedict's words also remind us of the centrality of the Incarnation, not only to Catholic belief but to the history of the world.
"A woman is Mother of God. One might say: how is this possible?" How, indeed? While Catholic theology owes much to Aristotle, as the Holy Father points out "Aristotelian philosophy tells us that between God and man there exists only a non-reciprocal relationship." That which is unchanging (God) cannot become one with that which changes (man).
And yet that is precisely what happened at the Incarnation. Christ "was not born only as a man who had something to do with God, but in him God was born on earth. God came out from himself."
But just as importantly, "God has drawn us into himself, so that we are no longer outside of God, but we are inside, inside God himself." Here Pope Benedict echoes the Athanasian Creed, which says that God became man "not by the conversion of the Divinity into a human body, but by the assumption of humanity in the Godhead." Through the Incarnation, God does not change, but He changes man by making us "participate in his interior relationship."
In the previous post, I mentioned that Pope Benedict showed how two titles of Mary, Theotokos (Mother of God) and Mater Ecclesiae (Mother of the Church), are really the same, because "Where Christ is born, there begins the movement of recapitulation, the moment of the calling, of the construction of his body, of the holy Church." The Church is the continuation of the Incarnation in time:
Birth in Bethlehem, birth in the cenacle [the Upper Room, where the Holy Spirit descended upon Mary and the disciples at Pentecost]. Birth of the Child Jesus, birth of the body of Christ, of the Church. They are two events, or one single event.
But then the Holy Father reminds us of something that we too often forget:
But between the two really stand the cross and the resurrection. And only through the cross does the journey toward the totality of Christ take place, toward his risen body, toward the universalization of his being in the unity of the Church. And so, keeping in mind that it is only from the grain that falls to the ground that the great harvest comes, from the Lord pierced on the cross comes the universality of his disciples gathered into his body, put to death and risen.
The joy of Bethlehem at Christmas is inseparable from the anguish of Golgotha on Good Friday. Only through His Death can Christ complete the construction of His Body, the Church. And only by uniting ourselves to Him in Baptism and through the daily sacrifices of our own crosses can we be resurrected in Him and become part of Christ's Body.
But in becoming part of the Church, we find that our journey is not at its end, but only beginning. In my next post, we'll examine Pope Benedict's explanation of the Church's role in history, and what our participation in the Church demands of us.
More on Pope Benedict's Unscripted Homily:

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Taken from: http://catholicism.about.com/b/2010/10/15/pope-benedict-on-the-churchs-marian-doctrine.htm

Saturday, April 6, 2013

The sin of the century

“The sin of the century is the loss of the sense of sin. – Pope Pius XII (in a 1946 address to the United States Catechetical Congress)

Prophetic much?
Obviously such a sin was already occurring at his time for him to be addressing it. But how much more does that ring true 60 years later?
20 years after Pope Pius XII made that statement Joseph Fletcher founded his famous theory of “Situational Ethics” which basically says that no act has any kind of absolute moral gravity. Every act’s morality depends on the situation. So even lying, murder, stealing, etc. can all be – not only excusable or justified – but inherently good if the situation merits it. In other words, for Fletcher, the end does justify the means.
Of course, this leads us down the slippery slope of immorality to where, in our human weakness, we are able to justify in our heads the most horrendous crimes against humanity and call it “the loving thing to do.”
It led Fletcher to conclusions like:
“Our cultural tradition holds that life has absolute value, but that is really not good enough anymore. Sometimes, no life is better.” – Joseph Fletcher
Scary. Especially when it’s somebody else who is deciding whether or not my life has any value or not to them!
Of course, that’s exactly what we’ve done in our country well over 50 millions times in the last lifetime – over 50 millions abortions.  Over 50 million human lives (in the U.S. alone) were ended because somebody else decided for them that “no life is better.”
But on a much broader scale, this is what has happened across the board the past 60 years since Pope Pius XII made that statement.
We’ve forgotten the true cardinal virtues (Prudence, Justice, Fortitude and Temperance) and traded them in for the universal “virtue” of Tolerance (our secular religion).  And now we’re so darn tolerant that we even tolerate sin and evil.
We’ve taken the theological virtues of Faith, Hope and Charity from their focus on God and others and redirected them all to focus on ourselves.  And once I do that – once sin only concerns myself and I’ve cut God and others out of the equation – then I can’t even see why a sin is a sin.  The word sin doesn’t even make sense to me.
We’ve numbed ourselves. We’ve lost our sense of sin.
On a physical level, this is similar to a chef losing his sense of touch.  If he’s cooking in the kitchen and he picks up a pan that is too hot, his sense of touch tells him, “hey, that’s too hot – that hurts!”  And so he lets go and corrects his behavior.
The pain he felt when he touched the hot pan was actually healthy.  It told him that his grabbing the hot pan was hurting his body.  If he had no sense of touch, he would have kept on burning his hand and injuring his body.
Our culture says, “No, the problem was not that you touched the hot pan.  The problem is that your body told you it was bad to touch the hot pan.  Who am I to tell you that touching a hot pan is bad for you.  Here is some pain medication.  Now you can touch the hot pan as much as you want and you won’t feel a thing!”
The sense of sin works similarly.  We need our sense of sin to know when we are sinning – to know when we’re injuring our souls. And our culture says, “No, the problem is not that you’ve sinned.  The problem is that you just need to get over that guilt complex you’ve got – it’s not real.  It’s all in your head.  And it’s keeping you from enjoying what you want to do. (oh, and here’s some pain medication that will help with that too).”
We’ve lost our sense of sin to the point that we don’t even believe Sin exists anymore.  And that is why this, itself, is the sin of the century.
“The greatest trick the devil ever pulled was convincing the world he did not exist.” – Verbal from The Usual Suspects (movie)
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20 comments Add comment
paul merrill January 15, 2009 at 12:38 pm
TOTALLY agreed.
And you didn’t even mention how situational ethics describes how all those CEOs have shafted our economy.
Reply
Deacon John January 15, 2009 at 12:57 pm
Interestingly, Our Lady said that “most souls go to hell because of the sins of impurity!”
She also said in another apparition that the greatest sin today is “atheism.” Never before in the history of man, have so many people denied the existence of God. I guess it all ties in, if you don’t believe in God, there is no sin, so anything goes, especially sexual sins. What a mixed up world we live in! As the Lord said: “When the Son of Man returns . . . will He find any faith on earth?” Lord, have mercy on us!
Deacon John
Reply
+JMJ+ @ TotusTuusFamily January 16, 2009 at 8:26 pm
Great post. This post had me at the picture of one of my favorite film characters, Kaiser Sozey!
I’ve enjoyed visiting your blog. It’s one I’ll want to come back to.
Reply
Watanabex January 20, 2009 at 12:47 pm
I got to your blog via reddit and i love it, great posts keep on writting, i’ll be visiting almost everyday now :D
Reply
Patricia Prenosil January 21, 2009 at 6:39 pm
Here in WA we just passed the assisted suicide law. Now I wonder, if I get cancer will the insurance company tell me they won’t cover my treatment but they will be happy to pay for me to kill myself and stop costing them money? hmmm…. How much is a life worth? Will saving my life be measured in dollar amounts? That treatment will cost more than she will contribute to society, so she’s expendable. We pretty much already think that way. The unwanted unborn, the poor, and the disabled can’t “do” anything or will suffer in life so we should just kill them now. Their lives are cheap. So many people are so confused and lost. We have to pray our butts off!!

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Taken from: http://fallibleblogma.com/index.php/the-sin-of-the-century/

Friday, April 5, 2013

Prayers of Angel of Peace at Fatima




Back
Spring 1996

The Angel of Fatima - 80 Years Ago!

PART I
The Angel's First Visit and Lesson
80 years have passed since the Angel of Fatima instructed and prepared the three little shepherds of Fatima, Lucia, Jacinta and Francisco, for the visit and messages of Our Lady of Fatima. The 'success' of Fatima has depended in a very large part upon the early intuition of the Portuguese episcopate that the story of Fatima presents us with the truths of the gospel in a simple straight-forward fashion, applying them prophetically to the present hour. Both the events and messages of Fatima are, therefore, a popular catechism of the faith. This applies in a special way to the Angel of Fatima, who may well be called the 'first secret' of Fatima, for Sr. Lucy kept the very knowledge of his visits a secret for some 20 years. 1
Like the Blessed Mother, the Angel appeared six times at Fatima,... the first three times when he appeared to Lucy and two other girls in 1915 he said nothing. In the course of 1916 he gave spiritual lessons to Lucy, Jacinta and Francisco. We want to reflect upon these latter, for in his three lessons the Angel offered the children a simple but remarkably profound synthesis of spiritual theology, as can be gleaned from Holy Scripture and the writings of the saints. It is of interest to us not simply for historical reason, but even more because that which the angel did in their behalf is essentially what and how the Guardian Angel seeks to influence and guide us to sanctity.
First Visit: Spring, 1916: Loca do Cabeço
Lucy and her two companions had sought shelter from the weather in the hollow of the rock on the eastern slope of the Loca do Cabeço. After lunch and their prayers -- a rosary, which they sometimes ingeniously abbreviated down to the double ejaculations, "Hail, Mary", "Holy Mary" in place of the whole prayers, in order to more quickly get down to the business of play! -- they saw approaching them from the east over the little dale "a light, whiter than snow, in the form of a young man, transparent, and brighter than crystal pierced by the rays of the sun. As he drew nearer, we could distinguish his features more and more clearly. We were surprised, absorbed, and struck dumb with amazement."
How biblical is Lucy's description both of the angel and their own reaction. Consider the angel of the Resurrection: "an angel of the Lord came down from heaven, and drawing near rolled back the stone,... His countenance was like lightning, and his raiment like snow. And for fear of him the guards were terrified" (Mt 28,2b-3). Similarly, St. John speaks of an angel whose face was bright like the sun (cf. Apoc 10,1). When the women came to the tomb and entered it, "they saw a young man sitting at the right side, clothed in a white robe, and they were amazed. He said to them, 'do not be terrified'" (Mk 16,5-6).
St. Mark tells us that they fled in trembling, "and they said nothing to anyone, for they were afraid" (Mk 16,8). Just as the Resurrection Angel assured the women, and St. Gabriel had before reassured the prophet Daniel (cf. Dan 9,21f) and the Blessed Virgin at the Annunciation, the Angel of Fatima reassured the children, "Fear Not! I am the Angel of Peace. Pray with me." Here are three points for reflection.
1. 'Fear not!'
Those who fear God have nothing to fear from God's angel, although his apparition is awesome, for he is literally filled with the holiness of God, whom he reveals. So it is that Daniel the prophet "fell upon his face trembling" at the presence of St. Gabriel (Dan 8,17); but not only Daniel but many others of the prophets and saints of Scripture. For brevity's sake be mentioned only St. John who twice fell down in worship at the foot of an angel, the latter being so bright and glorious, his words so divine, that John thought himself in the presence of our Lord Himself (Apoc 19,10; 22,9). John presents his 'error' precisely as a proof that guarantees the truth of his Revelations, since only the holy angel could be so one in union with our Lord! Here is a grace of divine presence and union that the devil cannot effectively reproduce, even when he comes tarnished as an "angel of light" (2 Cor 11,14). 2
The children also felt this overwhelming presence of the Divine in and through this angel: "The supernatural atmosphere which enveloped us was so intense, that we were for a long time scarcely aware of our own existence ... The presence of God made itself felt so intimately and so intensely that we did not even venture to speak to one another. Next day, we were still immersed in this spiritual atmosphere." This grace was repeated anew after the final vision of the angel with an even greater ecstasy of grace and love. She recalls: The force of the presence of God was so intense that it absorbed and almost completely annihilated us. It seemed to deprive us even of the use of our bodily senses for a considerable length of time. During those days, we performed all our exterior actions as though guided by that same supernatural being who was impelling us thereto. The peace and happiness which we felt were great, but wholly interior, for our souls were completely immersed in God."3
Lucy also observed after the first encounter with the angel, "It did not occur to us to speak about this Apparition, nor did we think of recommending that it be kept secret, the very Apparition itself imposed secrecy. It was so intimate, that it was not easy to speak of it at all." The reason for this is that the most proper form of angelic communication is through the light of the gifts of the Holy Spirit, such that the soul receives the divine knowledge directly in the innermost part of the soul beyond the realm of words. The soul has understood things and has no words to express them; it is laborious to speak. Even though the angel did speak to the children, he additionally communicated these greater spiritual graces to them in the intimate depths of the soul.
2. 'I am the Angel of Peace'
Pope St. Gregory taught that the names of the angels do not refer to their essence but rather to their mission and ministry which they exercise on behalf of mankind. 'Michael' means "Who is like GOD!?" for his mission is to teach us the humility of faith. 'Raphael' means the 'medicine of God' for he was sent to heal Tobit's blindness and 'cure' Sarah of the harassment of the evil spirit. Now here we have the Angel of Peace! His mission, accordingly is to lead men to peace! It is a bit of holy irony that Fatima has brought forth the Blue Army, but insofar as its weapons are prayer and sacrifice, these souls stand right in the ranks behind this holy angel. For the peace of nations is a gift from God; peace of heart come from loving submission to God; and peace in God comes from loving union with Him.
3. 'Pray with me!'
It is not difficult for us to see the advantages of an angel assisting us in prayer. Raphael informed Tobit, "When you prayed,... I offered your prayer to God" (Tob 12,12). When the Angel prayed for the peace of Jerusalem, the Lord answered with "good comforting words" (Zach 1,13). We can scarcely comprehend the intercessory prayer of an angel. Commenting on the Holy Sacrifice of the Mass, where the priest prays: "Command, O Lord, that this sacrifice [of the Body and Blood of Christ] be brought by the hands of Your holy angel to Your altar in heaven...", St. Thomas attributes to the angel a singular intercessory power beyond the priest, saying, "the angel assisting at the divine mysteries presents the prayers of the priest and the people to God according to Apoc 8,4: 'The smoke of the incense of the oblations of the saints ascends from the hand of the angel'" (Summa III.83,4,9m). And again in the same place, "the Mass ('missa' from the verb 'mittere' meaning 'to send') may well be so-called because the priest sends his prayers to God through the angel, even as the people send theirs through the priest."
Still with all their power and purity, the prayers of the holy angels, considered only from the intrinsic nature of grace and nature, are evidently infinitely less than God. The angelic hymns of praise, to say nothing of man's could never have been truly worthy of God. And then, the unthinkable happened: GOD became man, the SON became the High Priest of the good things to come. God Himself entered the lists of prayer on the side of creatures, He joined us all to Himself in His own infinitely pleasing sacrifice of praise and offered it to the Father. God chose man first, but for the sake of man, He also chose the Angels, so that He might recapitulate all things in heaven and earth in Christ (cf. Eph 1,10). It is for their love of Christ and His members in the Mystical Body, that the angels long to join us in prayer and adoration. In the Byzantine Mass they sing: "Master, Lord our God, Who have established in heaven orders and armies of angels and archangels for the liturgy of your glory, bring it about that together with our entrance, the entrance of the holy angels may be made, who celebrate the liturgy together with us and together with us sing glory to Your goodness." And again later, "Now the heavenly powers join invisibly with us in adoration." While in the Roman Rite, we celebrate and implore: "Through Christ the angels of heaven offer their prayer of adoration as they rejoice in your presence for ever. May our voices be one with theirs as we join in their triumphant hymn of praise, Holy, holy holy..." The prayer of the Church is only complete, when men and angels are united with Christ in the praise of the Blessed Trinity.
Prayer and the Great Commandments
What prayer does the angel teach the children at Fatima? A simple prayer of adoration and intercession: "O my God, I believe, I adore, I hope and I love You, and I beg pardon for all who do not believe, do not adore, do not hope and do not love you." 4 The efficacy of this prayer can be appreciated when we perceive that this prayer exercises us in the fulfillment of the two greatest commandments, in the love of God and in the love of neighbor. "Upon these two commandments depend the whole of the Law and the prophets" (Mt 22,39). As St. Paul also teaches: "The whole Law if fulfilled in one word, 'Thou shalt love thy neighbor as they self." (Gal 5,14; cf. Rom 13,8. 10). Once we advert to this truth and recall that the children would pray this prayer for hours and hours, we are no longer surprised, that they made such rapid progress in virtue and holiness.
We may not all be Olympic athletes, we may not all be intellectual geniuses, but the grace of God is offered to all that they become heroic in sanctity. And all we have to do is seriously will to love. One of its easiest exercises is this prayer! "This commandment, that I command thee this day is not above thee, nor far off from thee. Nor is it in heaven, that thou shouldst say: 'Which of us can go up to heaven to bring it unto us, and we may hear and fulfill it in work'. Nor is it beyond the sea [at some far away shrine] that thou mayest excuse thyself, and say: 'Which of us can cross the sea, and bring it unto us, that we may hear, and do that which is commanded?' But the word is very near unto thee, in thy mouth and in thy heart, that thou mayest do it!" (Deut 30,11-14).
Now, it is not simply that the angel offers us the knowledge of a simple prayer formula for the fulfillment of these two greatest commandments, so that we can do it on our own. The angel ardently wants us to pray with him. Each of our Guardian Angels wants us to get down on our knees and pray with him. In doing so, the Lord will be able to fulfill one of His finest promises, "Wherever two or more are gathered together in My Name, I am present among them" (Mt 18,20). This prayer is so short that we could repeat it frequently like an ejaculation throughout the day, and so remain united with our angel, and walk in the presence of God.
Reverence at Prayer
That the Angel of Fatima not only knelt down, but prostrated till His forehead touched the ground is a lesson with what great reverence we ought to present our prayer, lest through rote, they be a mere lip service. The Angel instructed the child to "Pray thus. The hearts of Jesus and Mary are attentive to the voice of your supplications." These words, "pray thus" practically reiterate the words Jesus used when he taught the disciples how to pray; on that occasion he gave them the "Our Father" (Mt 6,9ff). St. Augustine explained that the "Our Father" is not simply the best prayer, but it is the model of all prayers. Similarly, the angel did not intend to tie the children down to a limited formula, but taught that the love of God and neighbor must be at the heart of all prayer.
Since many are discouraged at prayer, feeling themselves so alone and abandoned, they need to hear this truth of faith, that Jesus and Mary love them, and that all goods come to us through prayer. As St. Alphonsus affirmed, the only grace that is always and everywhere offered to us is the gift of prayer, for through it we can obtain every good thing from God.
Then the angel disappeared and left the children for several months to see whether they would be faithful to the grace received and their resolution. With no one to talk to beyond themselves, with no further consoling visits of the angel, the children remained true to their purpose. As Lucy stated: The Angel's "words engraved themselves so deeply on our minds, that we could never forget them. From then on, we used to spend long periods of time, prostrate like the Angel, repeating his words, until we fell exhausted." They practiced heroic generosity.
Fr. William Wagner, ORC

The Heavenly Ascent

The following text is an extract from the life of St. Gertrude the Great, a mystic from the Middle Ages and the Abbess of an important Benedictine Monastery.
"Our Lord showed her the path by which souls ascend to heaven. It resembled a straight plank, a little inclined, so that those who ascended did so with difficulty. They were assisted and supported by hands on either side, which indicated the prayers offered for them. Those who were assisted by the angels had a great advantage, as they repelled the dragons who flew round it, endeavoring to prevent their prayers. The religious who have lived under obedience were assisted by a kind of railing, placed at each side of this plank, so that they were both supported and protected from falling. In some places these railings were removed, as a punishment to those superiors who had failed to govern their subjects by the rules of obedience. But all the souls who had been truly obedient were assisted and supported by the angels, who removed every impediment form their path." (Life and Revelations of St. Gertrude. Rockford, Tan. 1983. p. 540-41).
Laugh or Cry
On a radio talk show one evening the topic of the angels came up for discussion. Things proceeded reasonably until an agnostic, would-be-wit heckled his problem: "You know, I just can't get anywhere with all this talk about angels and heaven. I would just never know how to get my shirt on over my wings!"

Without the least hesitation, the host responded, "Buddy, you needn't worry about getting a shirt on over your wings, you ought to start figuring out how you are going to get your pants on over your tail".
St. Eugene Mazenod & the Holy Angels
Pope John Paul II recently canonized St. Eugene von Mazenod, the founder of the Oblates of Mary Immaculate (OMI). His life was marked by many remarkable interventions by his Guardian Angel. "This happens," he explained, because I pray to my Guardian Angel every morning, that he protect me from all harm."
He also attributed his success in personal relationships to his friendship with the Holy Angels. Before every undertaking, meeting, before every sermon and the hearing of confessions, you have to ask your Guardian Angel to go ahead of you. At the same time you need to call on the Guardian Angel of the other party, so that the two angels can work things out in advance for you. They smooth the way, and help resolve some of the most difficult problems.
Footnotes to "Angel of Fatima -- 80 Years Ago"
1 How different from the host of would-be mystics that can't tell their story quick enough.
2 Unfortunately, there are apparently 100 gullible souls who are happy to get tricked, for every one with the Divine wisdom to discern the distinction between spiritual union and phenomenological light.
3 For purposes of discernment, it is extremely important to note that their peace and happiness were 'wholly interior'. In false visions, the enemy tries to give his saccharine version of spiritual peace and joy, but these are more superficial and are mostly linked to the soul's own self esteem. They are not a matter of being 'completely immersed in God.' When on occasion the enemy tries to trick advanced souls by capitalizing on the soul's love for God, four things do not fall together. First, there will be some disquiet or agitation in the soul. Second, the soul will find that it is being carried outside the divine will somehow with respect to time, place or circumstances. Third, rather than being immersed in God (God's gift to the soul) the soul may perceive that its own love for God has been vehemently stimulated and is impelling the soul towards God. And fourth the customary accompanying increase in humility will be wanting, though the soul may persevere in its actual state of humility. To illustrate, the enemy once communicated wonderful insights about God to St. Ignatius of Loyola. His love, thus stimulated, he lost himself in prayer and praising. But later he reflected that this took him away from his duties and was costing him much needed sleep. Thus, he concluded that the devil was behind those insights. In a similar way the devil often tries to destroy the health of God's friends with intemperately long night vigils.
4 One of the popular versions of this prayer uses 'trust' instead of 'hope'. They are not the same. Hope is the whole; trust is a part. The theological virtue of hope and the verb 'hope' have God as their formal object, the infinite goodness of God which we desire as our beatitude. Trust is only a part of hope and is not directed towards the proper object of hope itself, but refers to the means. We trust in God because of His omnipotence and his bounty that He will afford us every means to achieve the object and goal of Hope. Trust is wonderful, but it is less than hope, for it is only one part of hope.
Fr. William Wagner, ORC
All texts of the Circular Letters are copyrighted and may not be reproduced without written permission except for personal use.
© 2008 Order of the Holy Cross

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Taken from: http://www.opusangelorum.org/english/fatima.html