O my God, Thou knowest I have never desired but to love Thee alone. I seek no other glory. Thy Love has gone before me from my childhood, it has grown with my growth, and now it is an abyss the depths of which I cannot fathom. -St. Therese
Monday, January 31, 2011
Mary of Egypt... one of the great revert stories of all time!
Saturday, January 29, 2011
Check out Leona's Blog
-Leona Choy, a Catholic convert, writer, speaker and publisher who is well into her 80s! (Just try to keep up with that, ladies!)
Catch the full post here.
Check out Leona's Blog
One of the most unlikely "convert stories" I've ever read: Journey to the Land of MORE
Leona was nearing her 80th birthday. She was a lifelong born-again, baptized-in-the-Spirit, Wheaton graduate and evangelical missionary to China and other countries. She was also the author of more than 30 books on loving God and giving one's life fully to God.
While returning home after a book tour of her final memoirs, God stepped in to send her on a new adventure. Leona set out to study the Catholic Church to convince a friend who had become Catholic that she was in serious error and needed to return to her evangelical roots. Love for her friend's soul motivated her to dig into Catholic teaching - in order to refute false teaching and win back her friend.
As with Sarah and Elizabeth, God was about to do a new work. An almost impossible thing. God was about to reveal to Leona - at the age of 80 - that there was more to the Catholic Church than she had ever imagined. While she expected to discover a mountain of error, she discovered a land of Truth and Beauty.
God was about to show her the land of More.
As Leona studied Catholic teaching in order to tear it to pieces and save her friend from heresy... an amazing thing began to happen. It was Leona who became convinced that she had found - not an apostate church - but the Church that Jesus Christ HIMSELF founded.
In her book Journey to the Land of More, Leona presents each of her perceptions of the Catholic Church, and she explains how God stripped away her misconceptions and gave her enough grace to embrace His Church.
"I hereby surrender to Truth, to the Church which Jesus established as His Body, His Bride...I surrender my past misunderstandings...I embrace Jesus wholly in His Church" (136).
After four years of study and painstaking research, on the threshold of her 80th birthday, Leona was received into the Catholic Church. "I wanted to seize the moment and hold it fast....It was not merely a symbol; it was the real presence of Jesus Christ. I partook of His very Body and Blood (John 6)" (146 Choy).
After a lifetime spent as a happy, contented evangelical, God called Leona to a journey of great faith and discovery.
What would happen to her friends? What would she do with all those books that chronicled life as an evangelical? Would anyone listen to her or would everyone think she had gone a little crazy?
Would she still have a story to tell? Or would she be put on a shelf, to be forgotten by those who just couldn't go there.
What did God have for a woman whose life was nearly spent? Why in the world would He call her to this path?
When I think of Leona, I think of Sarah and Elizabeth. When they began to feel those first flutters of life within their once-barren wombs, did they feel as Leona did when she began to realize that God was not showing her how to convince her friend of Catholic error, but instead He was convincing her that the Catholic Church was His Church?
When Sarah and Elizabeth held their sons and those little boys reached up to touch the weathered faces of their mothers, was that how Leona felt when she received Jesus Christ - Body, Blood, Soul and Divinity - in the Eucharist. Was it a stirring up of new life, a kind of spiritual birthing, a gift that had once seemed impossible?
What does it take for a woman in her 80s to say yes to such a profound change of heart? It's grace! Leona Choy is Catholic by Grace!
Over and over, Leona repeats one line: God has had His hand on her life. And it was His good pleasure to show her something new, something beautiful, something unexpected in the Catholic Church.
As with every long wait, as with every difficult labor, the gift on the other side is worth it all.
Congratulations, Leona! And welcome Home!
Journey to the Land of More can be ordered through CHResources. P.O. Box 8290, Zanesville, OH 43702 or 1-800-664-5110 or online www.chresources.com (or from amazon.com)
Leona Choy's blog: http://leonachoy.blogspot.com/
One of the most unlikely "convert stories" I've ever read: Journey to the Land of MORE
Wednesday, January 26, 2011
St. Thomas Aquinas - sometimes Feast Days are best celebrated by stillness
"The last word of St. Thomas is not communication but silence. And it is not death which takes the pen out of his hand. His tongue is stilled by the super-abundance of life in the mystery of God. He is silent, not because he has nothing further to say; he is silent because he has been allowed to glimpse into the inexpressible depths of that mystery which is not reached by any human thought or speech.
The acts of the canonization process record: On the feast of St. Nicholas, in the year 1273, as Thomas turned back to his work after Holy Mass, he was strangely altered. He remained steadily silent; he did not write; he dictated nothing. He laid aside the Summa Theologica on which he had been working. Abruptly, in the middle of the treatise on the Sacrament of Penance, he stopped writing. Reginald, his friend, asks him, troubled: "Father, how can you want to stop such a great work?" Thomas answers only, "I can write no more." Reginald of Piperno seriously believed that his master and friend might have become mentally ill through his overwhelming burden of work. After a long while, he asks and urges once again. Thomas gives the answer: "Reginald, I can write no more. All that I have hitherto written seems to me nothing but straw. Reginald is stunned by his reply".
- Josef Pieper, The Silence of St. Thomas
St. Thomas Aquinas - sometimes Feast Days are best celebrated by stillness
Tuesday, January 25, 2011
The Baton Passes from St. Paul to St. Timothy (and St. Titus)
When I read chapter 4 verses 16 & 17, it seemed like a good stopping point as night falls on the Conversion of St. Paul and morning brings the Feast of Sts. Timothy and Titus.
Paul writes: Therefore, I urge you, be imitators of me. For this reason, I am sending you Timothy, who is my beloved and faithful son in the Lord; he will remind you of my ways in Christ, just as I teach them everywhere in the Church.
Let us close the evening with St. Paul, eagerly anticipating a new day that brings us news of Timothy and Titus.
The Baton Passes from St. Paul to St. Timothy (and St. Titus)
Believing That Unity is Possible - not for the weak or pessimistic!
"One must resist the temptation of resignation and pessimism, which is a lack of trust in the power of the Holy Spirit," the pope said Jan. 25 at an ecumenical evening prayer service marking the close of the Week of Prayer for Christian Unity.
(Read full article by clicking on CNS link)
Believing That Unity is Possible - not for the weak or pessimistic!
Feast of St. Paul: what a convert!
Feast of St. Paul: what a convert!
Monday, January 24, 2011
St. Francis de Sales - and some of his little gems
St. Francis de Sales - and some of his little gems
Who is your Big Sister or Big Brother in the Faith? Time to say thanks!
Who is your Big Sister or Big Brother in the Faith? Time to say thanks!
Sunday, January 23, 2011
Ecumenism: through the eyes of a Protestant Preacher's Kid Turned Catholic
Ecumenism: through the eyes of a Protestant Preacher's Kid Turned Catholic
Attention to Details and Deadlines
Attention to Details and Deadlines
Get it Together, Pilgrims: From Today's Readings in the Mass
I Corinthians 1:10-12
Get it Together, Pilgrims: From Today's Readings in the Mass
Christian Divisions - It's NOT okay.
How good it is, how pleasant, where the people dwell as one! Psalm 133:1
Christian Divisions - It's NOT okay.
Saturday, January 22, 2011
St. Ignatius of Antioch - just prior to his marytrdom
St. Ignatius of Antioch - just prior to his marytrdom
Father, make them one . . .
Read the full article here: http://www.zenit.org/article-31529?l=english
Father, make them one . . .
Friday, January 21, 2011
Agnes' Day and Agnus Dei
You've got to read this blog post by Fr.
Dwight Longenecker:
http://gkupsidedown.blogspot.com/2011/01/meeting-agnes.html
Agnes' Day and Agnus Dei
Philosophy and Ecumenism Intersect Here
Subtitled: Go ahead and find out what the Catholic Church really teaches and has believed for 2000 years.
Philosophy and Ecumenism Intersect Here
Words on Unity & the Eucharist by St. Cyprian (249-258 A.D.)
Words on Unity & the Eucharist by St. Cyprian (249-258 A.D.)
Thursday, January 20, 2011
The Last of the Litter
One year, in the cold of winter, Bows went into labor. She had two puppies before we figured out that Buttons was acting really bonkers because his companion was in labor. We dashed outside to bring Bows into the warm kitchen. The two puppies she had already delivered didn't make it.
There was one more puppy, a rare albino pup. Mom worked with the puppy for awhile, but she said there was no way it would make it. It was the runt of the litter, she said. And sickly-looking at that.
I was really sad. It was late and Mom ushered us all to bed. In the middle of the night, I woke up and wondered about Bows and her little white puppy. I quietly made my way down the cold hallway. When I got to the kitchen, I knelt down, tucking my long flannel nightgown around me.
There was Bows. The puppy was lifeless. Gone.
I cried. Our mother dog was licking and licking her little one. Mothering this tiny, dead puppy. Hoping against hope that her efforts would stir life up again in the last puppy of her litter.
I cried for the puppy, but mostly, I cried for Bows.
And I thought about maternal instinct and how much a mother - even a mother Pomeranian - needs to nurture the life she has birthed.
A love so deep, an instinct so strong, that the signs of death cannot stop her from trying.
Every baptized child of God is entrusted to the care of Mother Church. And there are times when I marvel at the Maternal Instinct that is intrinsic to everything She does. Sometimes, we are as dead and lifeless - spiritually - as that tiny newborn puppy. Anyone looking at us would say, she isn't going to make it. You might as well go get some sleep and stop hoping (and praying).
But Mother Church just keeps giving, nurturing, trying to stir life back into the lifeless-little-me.
Washing, through the Sacrament of Reconciliation.
Feeding, through the Eucharist.
Interceding, through the prayers of the Faithful. Saints above. Sojourners below. Everyone offering prayers of hope for each little soul.
I still wake up in the middle of the night sometimes. And I still journey down cold hallways. . . to kneel. For you, dear little one. Can't you feel the Maternal Instinct of Mother Church? She's calling you back.
Come Home.
The Last of the Litter
Pope Benedict XVI: Ecumenism Already Has Borne Fruit (CNS)
Pope Benedict XVI: Ecumenism Already Has Borne Fruit (CNS)
St. Ignatius of Antioch, speaking/writing in 110 A.D.
St. Ignatius of Antioch, speaking/writing in 110 A.D.
Wednesday, January 19, 2011
The beautiful word "IF"
The beautiful word "IF"
Pick a Church, Any Church? Or is there really one Lord and one Faith?
One day, I asked Dad a question that I'd been thinking about for quite awhile. I wondered how Dad would answer the question.
"Dad, what would you do if you had a parishioner who was marrying someone from another faith community? How would you counsel them - if the future bride and groom had completely different opinions on where to worship?"
Dad responded so swiftly and directly that I knew he had faced this question many times. "I would urge them strongly to decide on one church."
"Even if their choice was not your parish?" I asked, knowing that this was the question I really wanted answered.
"Yes. Even then."
I've thought about his answer many times in the last ten years. And I understand the guiding principle of his position. Unity matters. Where faith and marriage intersect, unity matters.
The microcosm is seen clearly in the marital bond. A man takes a bride and they need to be one. This becoming one is good, but sometimes it is very difficult, too.
If we take this lesson (at the micro-level) and expand it to the macrocosm, we learn another lesson. A very important lesson that is good, even if it is sometimes very difficult.
Marriage between a husband and a wife is the pale imitation of the relationship between Jesus Christ and His Bride (the Church).
St. Paul delights in making comparisons between marriage (and the love between husbands and wives) and the approaching Wedding Day between Christ and His Bride (the Church).
Dad's wisdom, when taken from the microcosm and applied to the macrocosm is very powerful - and potentially life changing.
If it is important for a husband and a wife to be one, how much more important is it for the Bride to be one with her Bridegroom?
We must stop acting like a Bride who thinks it doesn't really matter. You get to do your own thing. Go where you want. Think what you want. Act how you want. Agree to disagree.
The "children" are going to get mixed messages and then the lack of unity becomes greater and more tragic. Who are the children? The little ones who want to come to Christ. But where do they go? What church? What denomination? What is the right teaching to embrace?
Bride of Christ, you are scattered into more than 30,000 denominations. Some researchers say the number of denominations is closer to 50,000. You have different opinions on everything. Whether or not baptism matters. How to get saved. Whether or not salvation can be lost. What it means to be baptized in the Holy Spirit. Whether or not you must have the charismatic gifts of the Holy Spirit. What the Trinity is. What verses in the Bible really mean. Which verses are more important and should be memorized. The definition of a Sacrament - or whether or not there even is such a thing as a Sacrament. Whether the Creed is important or worthless. Whether going to church on Sunday matters. If the songs sung in church should be old hymns, only from the Psalms, or only new songs that have been written in the last five years and flashed on a big screen. Whether or not one should clap in church. Or say amen. Or whether or not women should only wear dresses and never cut their hair short.
You disagree on everything.
And you don't think it matters. But, it does matter.
If it is important for a husband and wife to be one - if unity is of paramount importance in marriage - how much more important is unity to the Life and Love shared between The Bridegroom who is Jesus and His Bride who is the Church?
The Bridegroom has shared His deepest Heart with you, His Bride. When He prays for you, He asks God to make you one -- with a unity that is perfect -- a unity that is as perfect as the unity between God the Father and God the Son (John 17). Why? So that the world may know Him. Jesus Christ loves His Bride. And He wants you to be so united to Him that your unity draws more and more to come.
True unity is difficult. Husbands and wives know it. Sometimes, it means sitting down and talking and talking and talking. Sometimes it means opening your heart and really listening to your husband (or wife). Sometimes, it means dying to self.
Bride of Christ, it will not be easy, but unity is worth it.
Re-consider the 2000 year-old Church. Deep inside you, you know there is no other Christian faith community that could draw all believers. You know that there is only one Home that can accommodate charismatics and evangelicals and holiness&sanctification Christians and those who hunger for a sacramental faith and those who are quiet contemplatives like the early Quakers. Ask the Bridegroom to show you if She is the seat of unity. Show me where we can all truly be one (Ephesians 4:3-6 ...to preserve the unity of the spirit through the bond of peace: one body and one Spirit, as you were also called to the one hope of your call; one Lord, one faith, one baptism;one God and Father of all, who is over all and through all and in all.)
And if you are on the journey home, may God continue to bless you. The Bridegroom is waiting for you in the Eucharist. Open your heart to the possibility that unity is possible -- and that there is a place where it can happen.
Pick a Church, Any Church? Or is there really one Lord and one Faith?
Does Christian Unity Really Matter?
Does Christian Unity Really Matter?
Tuesday, January 18, 2011
January 2011 Catholic by Grace article
January 2011 Catholic by Grace article
Monday, January 17, 2011
The Week of Prayer for Christian Unity Begins January 18th, 2011
The Week of Prayer for Christian Unity Begins January 18th, 2011
Podcasts... where to begin listening?
And even before that, there was writing and emails and article attachments.
And before that, EWTN television shows and Covenant Network Radio.
And before that RCIA and the Catechism.
And before that the Saints.
I keep thinking that things will settle down. God has taken me through all the new fields. The trail will taper off, and I will sit for awhile and pick the clover and kick up my feet, content with the thought that I have been down every path and seen all the little trails there are to see. I can rest, knowing I've learned how to do those things God wanted me to learn--so that I can take His Good News and spread it around a little more. Motivate somebody else--or have somebody else inspire me.
And then, something new falls in my lap.
Like Catholic Moments.
A Podcast.
And I realize that God takes delight in showing me more and more and more.
Enjoy:
http://castroller.com/podcasts/CatholicMomentsPodcast/2117619-CM%20165%20-%20The%20Lost%20Valentine
Podcasts... where to begin listening?
What do Martin Luther King, Jr., a Coca-cola commercial and the Church have in common?
What do Martin Luther King, Jr., a Coca-cola commercial and the Church have in common?
Sunday, January 16, 2011
Week of Prayer for Christian Unity: beginning here
(posted by Christopher Jordan on the Facebook Event page for "Week of Prayer for Christian Unity". If you would like to add your name to the FB Week of Prayer for Christian Unity, go to: http://www.facebook.com/event.php?eid=121909094545583&index=1)
Week of Prayer for Christian Unity: beginning here
Liturgical Change - perfect love casts out fear
Let Mother Church lead you. All will be well... |
Liturgical Change - perfect love casts out fear
Saturday, January 15, 2011
He's There - you just have to know how to look: putting on spiritual eyes
He's There - you just have to know how to look: putting on spiritual eyes
Friday, January 14, 2011
Inside Scoop
Inside Scoop