• THE FEAST OF CORPUS CHRISTI
    the-papal-procession-on-the-feast-of-corpus-christi-engraved-by-francois-alexandre-villain-1798-1884

    The title means the Feast of the Body of Christ. What great mysteries are contained in these few words! A bigoted onlooker sees us Catholics kneel before the statue of Our Lady, of St. Joseph, or a patron Saint, and he sees us kneel before the Blessed Sacrament. To him the acts are the same, and both idolatry. It is true outwardly they are the same, the knee is bent in each case; but look into the heart, question the mind, and see the difference. The genuflection before the image of Our Lady is humble supplication, childlike reverence; before the Blessed Sacrament it is adoration, and means supreme worship. Then what is the Blessed Sacrament that It causes such a difference in intention?

    It is the Body of Christ. To an instructed Catholic all is said. By the hypostatic union the Godhead dwells in the Sacred Body. The Divinity is there, and the Humanity of ” the Son of man.” The Body of Christ a part put for the whole is the Blessed Sacrament of the altar, that great gift Our Lord bestowed upon the Church on the eve of His Passion.  “I will not leave you orphans.” He had promised, and to fulfil His word He came to dwell amongst us, content with anything so that He might be with us, be of use to us, within reach of the poor, the loving, the sick.

    “Who is the Blessed Sacrament?”  the child asked. St. Philip’s answer will serve our purpose : “Come and see!” We look the world over in our mind’s eye; we trace Our Lord’s dwelling-places, guided by the little glimmering light. It shines sometimes in stately churches, in splendid cathedrals, but very seldom; in warehouses, barns, garrets, caves, wherever man can make room for the Lord of Majesty, wherever the creature can make shift to do with his Creator, and here very often. We look for His associates; we find some learned, some rich, some renowned. But these are few; they are mostly too busy to have time to spare for the “Wisdom of the Father.” We find, however, the poor, workmen and women, labourers from the field, factory hands, and children these sing His praises, lisp their prayers, and admire the beauty of His poor house. We ask about His duties. We find a “clean oblation” is offered” from the rising to the setting of the sun”; the hungry are fed line after line of craving souls come for their daily bread; the sick strengthened for the Homeward journey; the sorrowful listened to with patient silence, the doubtful counselled, the perplexed enlightened, the broken-hearted soothed and comforted.

    Can we answer the child’s question now: “Who is the Blessed Sacrament?” Do not these haunts, these associates, these duties, point out Jesus of Nazareth, the Healer of the sick, the Comfort of the afflicted, the Companion of the outcast, the Victim of the Cross? It is true His way of working now is different. In the Temple, in the streets of Nazareth, in the fields of Galilee, and on the rugged hills of Judea, Jesus spoke and touched, wrought miracles on nature and upon disease; but His working was not more real then than now. More hungry are fed now every day with miraculous Bread than upon Galilee’s Ashore. More sick are strengthened with the Food of the Way than ever in the land of Palestine. Then there was one Bleeding Victim on Calvary’s Mount; now, on the altar, there is offered thousands of times a day that clean oblation promised of old.

    Yes, Jesus of Nazareth is the Blessed Sacrament. Ask the child on its First Communion day, the priest after his first Mass, the dying man after Viaticum. They will tell you they have felt the sweetness of His words, they have felt a joy within them and a gladness that could only come from One, a God-made man, the Divine Lover of souls.

    “I have Jesus within me,” a child said. ” He is taking care of me, and I am taking care of Him.”  This was the afternoon of the boy’s First Communion day. Jesus has taken care of us all the days that we have lived. Is it not our turn to take care of Him, to honour Him? Will not our hearts go out to Him at least on this great Feast of His? Shall we not visit Him, bring Him flowers and candles? Better still, bring our hearts brimful of love and gratitude and adoration? “Lord, where dwellest Thou ?” the first Apostles asked. We know where He dwells. But to us as to them comes Our Lord’s answer:  “Come and see!”  We will come and see today. And so lovingly will we come, and with such lively faith, that we shall be led to repeat the visit often, and still more often, until we are one of those to whom the Presence of Our Lord in His Sacrament is life and hope and gladness.

    ” Sacrament most holy, O Sacrament Divine,
    All praise and all thanksgiving be every moment Thine.”

    Corpus Christi

    Taken from Saints and Festivals by Mother Mary Salome

    Imprimatur  1913

Saint for the Day

  • June 13—St. Anthony of Padua

    st-anthony

    In 1221 St. Francis held a general chapter at Assisi; when the others dispersed, there lingered behind, unknown and neglected, a poor Portuguese friar, resolved to ask for and to refuse nothing. Nine months later, Fra Antonio rose under obedience to preach to the religious assembled at Forli, when, as the discourse proceeded, “the Hammer of Heretics,” “the Ark of the Testament,” “the eldest son of St. Francis,” stood revealed in all his sanctity, learning, and eloquence before his rapt and astonished brethren. Devoted from earliest youth to prayer and study among the Canons Regular, Ferdinand de Bulloens, as his name was in the world, had been stirred, by the spirit and example of the first five Franciscan martyrs, to put on their habit and preach the Faith to the Moors in Africa. Denied a martyr’s palm, and enfeebled by sickness, at the age of twenty-seven he was taking silent but merciless revenge upon himself in the humblest offices of his community. From this obscurity he was now called forth, and for nine years France, Italy, and Sicily heard his voice, saw his miracles, and men’s hearts turned to God. One night, when St. Antony was staying with a friend in the city of Padua, his host saw brilliant rays streaming under the door of the Saint’s room, and on looking through the keyhole he beheld a little Child of marvellous beauty standing upon a book which lay open upon the table, and clinging with both arms round Antony’s neck. With an ineffable sweetness he watched the tender caresses of the Saint and his wondrous Visitor. At last the Child vanished, and Fra Antonio, opening the door, charged his friend, by the love of Him Whom he had seen, to “tell the vision to no man” as long as he was alive. Suddenly, in 1231, our Saint’s brief apostolate was closed, and the voices of children were heard crying along the streets of Padua, “Our father, St. Antony, is dead.” The following year, the church-bells of Lisbon rang without ringers, while at Rome one of its sons was inscribed among the Saints of God. Reflection.—Let us love to pray and labor unseen, and cherish in the secret of our hearts the graces of God and the growth of our immortal souls. Like St. Antony, let us attend to this, and leave the rest to God. https://gardenofmary.com/prayer-to-st-anthony/ https://gardenofmary.com/the-litany-of-st-anthony/ basket ful of flowers

    Taken from the “Pictorial Lives of the Saints: with Reflections for Every Day in the Year”

Sunday Sermon

  • Third Sunday after Pentecost ~ Be Sober and Watch

    Be sober, and watch
    —1 St. Peter v. 8.

    These few words of the Epistle, my brethren, contain a most important lesson for us. We may indeed say that of all the innumerable souls which have been lost, and which are going down every day into hell, far the greater part have come to this terrible end for neglect of this warning.

    There is a proverb, with which you are all familiar, that [the road to] hell is paved with good intentions. What does this mean? Does it mean that a good intention in itself is a thing which leads to hell? Of course not. But it means that the kind of good intentions which people are too apt to make are signs rather of damnation than of salvation, as they should be.

    What is this kind of good intention? It is one which stops just there, and which the one who makes it does not take the means to carry out. Sometimes we call them by a stronger name than intentions. We call them purposes, even firm purposes of amendment. They are the kind of purposes which a great many people make when they repent, or think they repent, of their habitual sins.

    A man comes to confession with a fearful habit of sin—of profane swearing, for instance. It has been on him for years. He has learned it in his youth, perhaps, from wicked parents or companions. He has almost become unconscious of it, and it seems to him no very important thing; it may be that he would not even mention it, did not the priest question him pretty closely. But when the priest does warn him about it he makes up his mind in a certain way that he ought to stop it, and makes a kind of purpose to do so. It is to be feared, however, that this is one of the purposes or intentions with which hell is paved. And why? Because it stops just there. It has no effect at all. It is all gone before he gets out of the confession-box. He will swear just as much to-morrow as he did to-day. He does not, probably, even remember his purpose, at any rate only till the time of his Communion; or if, perchance, he does remember it, he does not take the means to carry it out. And what is that means above all others? It is to watch against his sin. This he does not do. He does not keep on his guard to avoid those horrible oaths which have become a fixed habit with him. He does not watch himself, and, of course, falls again as he did before.

    Now you see, perhaps, the importance of St. Peter’s warning in the Epistle. Most of you who will be lost will be lost on account of habitual sins like this I have spoken of, not on account of occasional and unusual ones. It may be a habit of impure thoughts or words, of drunkenness, or something else; but it is a habit of some kind that will cause your damnation. The habit is a disease of your soul; you must get rid of it, if you wish to have any well-grounded hope of salvation. And you cannot get rid of it without watching as well as praying. “Watch,” says our Lord, “that you enter not into temptation.”

    Yes, a bad habit is a disease of your soul, a weak spot in it which you must guard. It is there your enemy is going to enter. What does St. Peter go on to say? “Be sober, and watch,” he says, “for your adversary, the devil, as a roaring lion, goeth about seeking whom he may devour.” Very well; the devil is not such a fool as to neglect your weak points. So it is those which you must watch and guard.

    If, then, you would be saved, keep before your mind all the time your habitual sins. Be on your guard against them continually, just as a man going on slippery ice is all the time careful how he places his feet. Repeat your resolutions frequently; make them practical and definite. Say to yourself, “Next time I am provoked I will keep down that profane word; next time such an object comes before my eyes I will turn them away; next time such a thought occurs I will instantly repel it.” Be on the lookout for danger, as a sailor is for rocks or icebergs in his course. Pray, of course, earnestly and frequently, but watch as well as pray. If you do you will save your soul; if you do not you will lose it.

    Five-minute Sermons for Low Masses on All Sundays of the Year
    By the Priests of the Congregation of St. Paul, 1893

“We declare that a great number of those who are condemned to eternal punishment suffer that everlasting calamity because of ignorance of those mysteries of faith which must be known and believed in order to be numbered among the elect.”

~ACERBO NIMIS
ENCYCLICAL OF POPE PIUS X ON TEACHING CHRISTIAN DOCTRINE



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