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Catholic Caucus: Daily Mass Readings, 10-16-12, OM, St. Hedwig, St. Margaret Mary Alacoque
USCCB.org/RNAB ^ | 10-16-12 | Revised New American Bible

Posted on 10/15/2012 10:11:14 PM PDT by Salvation

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To: Salvation
Vultus Christi

Saint Margaret Mary

 on October 15, 2012 8:02 PM |
Margherita Sacro Cuore.jpeg
October 16, 2012 is the sixth anniversary of my pilgrimage to Paray-le-Monial, la cité du Sacre-Coeur in the company of dear friends. Ma joie demeure. Little did I suspect then that six years later I would be living in a former monastery of the Visitation, where Saint Margaret Mary was greatly loved and honoured. Today that monastery of the Visitation is called Silverstream Priory.

The Mystical Invasion

Saint Teresa of Jesus died in 1582. Thirty-two years later, Mother Catherine Mectilde de Bar was born in 1614. And in 1647, sixty-five years after the death of Saint Teresa and thirty-three years after the birth of Mother Mectilde, Saint Margaret Mary was born. The spiritual climate in Europe, following the Council of Trent, was one of extraordinary effervescence. Henri Brémond in his monumental Histoire littéraire du sentiment religieux en France speaks of a "mystical invasion." Saint Teresa's Carmel had crossed the Pyrenees, introducing men and women of all states of life to the way of interior prayer. The Jesuits had launched their missions to North America or, as they called it, "New France." Men and women of God, too many to be counted, undertook great things for His glory. It was the golden age of great friendships in God. In 1610, the young widow, Jeanne-Françoise de Chantal, together with Francis de Sales, established at Annecy the Order of the Visitation of Holy Mary, declaring "that no great severity shall prevent the feeble and the weak from joining it."

The Choice of God

When Margaret Mary Alacoque entered the Visitation Monastery of Paray-le-Monial, it was assumed that she, like so many other women, would disappear into the cloister, leaving behind no more than the sweet lingering fragrance of another life given to Christ. But, as always, "God chose what is foolish in the world to shame the wise, God chose what is weak in the world to shame the strong, God chose what is low and despised in the world, even things that are not, to bring to nothing things that are, so that no human being might boast in the presence of God" (1 Cor 1:27-29).

Contemplating the Pierced Side

The icy wind of Jansenism was blowing through the chinks in more than one cloister. It chilled the heart with the fear of a distant and vindictive God, eclipsing the mission of Jesus sent by the Father, in the power of the Holy Spirit, "to proclaim release to the captives . . . to set at liberty those who are oppressed" (Lk 4:18). While the hearts of many around her grew cold, Saint Margaret Mary fixed her gaze upon the wounds of Jesus Crucified. Like Saint John the Apostle, like Saints Bernard, Lutgarde, Gertrude, Mechthilde, and countless others before and after her, the humble Visitandine of Paray-le-Monial was compelled by the Holy Spirit to look upon Jesus' pierced Side. "They shall look on Him whom they have pierced" (Zech 12:10, Jn 19:37).

A Priest, A Friend

In the Jesuit priest, Saint Claude La Colombière, Margaret Mary found a friend, one capable of standing with her at the Cross, of listening with her to the murmurings of the Holy Spirit, of gazing with her at the pierced Side of Jesus, and of entering with her to dwell in his Heart. The words of the apostle Paul seem to be those of Saint Claude to Margaret Mary: "It is God who establishes us with you in Christ and has commissioned us; He has put his seal upon us and given us His Spirit in our hearts as a guarantee" (2 Cor 1:22)

The Eucharistic Heart of Jesus

In contemplating the pierced Side of the Crucified, Saint Margaret Mary discovered what many had forgotten: "the breadth and length and height and depth of the love of Christ" (Eph 3:18). It was given her to "know the love of Christ which surpasses knowledge" and fills "with all the completion God has to give" (Eph 3:19). She discovered, moreover, that the open Side of Jesus beckons to all from the adorable Sacrament of the Altar, and that His Eucharistic is, at every moment, ablaze with love.

"Behold this Heart," He said, "which, not withstanding the burning love for man with which it is consumed and exhausted, meets with no other return from the generality of Christians than sacrilege, contempt, indifference, and ingratitude, even in the Sacrament of my Love. But what pierces my Heart most deeply is, that I am subjected to those insults by persons specially consecrated to my service."

Reparation

Reparation, Saint Margaret Mary understood, is an imperative of love. The Side of Jesus remains open in the Most Blessed Sacrament, and men pass it by -- some with a cold indifference, others with a merely formalistic token of acknowledgement, and still others without the slightest indication of grateful adoration -- and among these, alas, are priests and consecrated souls.

In this age of locked churches, of tabernacles forsaken from one Sunday to the next, of the Sacred Species so often handled casually and without reverence, and in the wake of public sacrileges perpetrated against the Blessed Sacrament, reparation to the Eucharistic Heart of Jesus is, more than ever, necessary.

The Cenacle, the Cross, the Altar

Saint Margaret Mary invites us to re-discover the Heart of Jesus ablaze with love in the Most Holy Eucharist. The Eucharistic Christ, the Christus Passus, abides in our midst as Priest and Victim. There He perpetuates the oblation made first in the Cenacle, and then from the altar of the Cross.

In every age souls, like Saint Margaret Mary, have been polarized by the mysteries of the Cenacle and of the Cross actualized in the Most Holy Eucharist. In some way, the Holy Spirit continually reproduces Saint John's icon of the Church contemplating the pierced Side of Jesus on Calvary: "Standing by the Cross of Jesus were His mother, and His mother's sister, Mary the wife Clopas, and Mary Magdalene. . . . and the disciple whom He loved" (Jn 19:25-26).

I Look Round for Pity

The Sacred Heart is at the center of the Most Holy Eucharist both as sacrifice and as sacrament. The sacred action of the Mass perpetuates the Sacrifice of Calvary by which Christ, obedient unto death, hands Himself over to His Father and to those who partake of His Body and Blood. The priestly Heart of Jesus that beats with love in the Sacrifice of the Mass where He offers Himself as Victim, lives and burns with the same fire of love in the Sacrament of the Altar. From the tabernacle, as once from the Cross, He seeks souls to console Him, saying in the psalmist's words: "I look round for pity, where pity is none, for comfort where there is no comfort to be found" (Ps 68:21).

The Burning Furnace of Love

One cannot look long at Jesus Crucified without "the eyes of the heart" (Eph 1:18) being drawn to His pierced Side, and without entering, drawn on by the Holy Spirit, through the door of His pierced Side, into what men and women of every age have experienced as a "burning furnace of love." The "unsearchable riches" (Eph 3:8) of the Sacred Heart of Jesus, contemplated "for now, as in a mirror darkly" (1 Cor 13:12), are given us, until the return of the Lord in glory, in the adorable mystery of the Eucharist. And so, we go to the altar and to the tabernacle again and again to taste "with all the saints" (Eph 3:18), the "perfect love that casts out fear" (1 Jn 4:18).


41 posted on 10/16/2012 8:44:28 PM PDT by Salvation ("With God all things are possible." Matthew 19:26)
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To: All
Vultus Christi

The Sacred Heart in Margaret's Kitchen

 on October 16, 2012 12:36 PM |
 
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A Family Story

My Irish grandmother's Christian name was Margaret Mary. As one might expect, a framed picture of the Sacred Heart figured prominently in her kitchen. She, like so many Irish Catholics of her generation had an unshakeable faith in the promises of the Sacred Heart to Saint Margaret Mary. In my "Treasury of the Sacred Heart" published in Dublin by Charles Eason, Middle Abbey Street, in 1860, I read the promise in which my grandmother invested her hope: "I shall bless the houses where the representation of my Sacred Heart shall be exposed."

Precious Inheritance

Shortly before her death at the age of 93, Grandma asked me if I wanted anything belonging to her. "Only your picture of the Sacred Heart," I said. She had me write my name on the back of it. The day after she died I took the picture to be reframed; it was placed on her coffin in church. After the funeral, I took the picture home and it stayed with me for about a year.

Give It Away

Some time later, on the eve of my cousin Patrick's wedding, my grandmother came to me in a dream and said, "I want you to give my picture of the Sacred Heart to Patrick as a wedding present." And so, I wrapped it carefully and presented Patrick and Cheryl with it on their wedding day. Patrick took one look at the wrapped package and said, "I know what it is. It's Grandma's picture of the Sacred Heart."


42 posted on 10/16/2012 8:50:17 PM PDT by Salvation ("With God all things are possible." Matthew 19:26)
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To: All

To See Thee More Clearly

by Food For Thought on October 16, 2012
 
The Pharisees, although astute at observing religious rules and rituals, did not do these things with pure intentions. Jesus clearly saw the envy and pride in their hearts.

It certainly is not easy in our material world to keep our hearts and intentions holy. We cannot rely on our own human frailty to resist sin and temptation. Even if people around us may observe that we are doing what seems right and admirable, the Lord can see straight into our hearts. We cannot be good, pure or holy on our own. We need to pray for the grace to continue following him.

Day by day
Oh Dear Lord
Three things I pray
To see Thee more clearly
Love Thee more dearly
Follow Thee more nearly
Day by day


43 posted on 10/16/2012 9:08:26 PM PDT by Salvation ("With God all things are possible." Matthew 19:26)
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To: All
“First and foremost, the right to life of every human person – from conception to natural death – is the primary and thus most essential of all human rights,” the letter stated. “Faith teaches and human reason confirms that human life is not a privilege bestowed on us by others, but rather a right that society must recognize and protect.

"As Christians, we are called to witness to an authentic ‘human ecology’ which safeguards all human life – no matter how frail or impaired – from being manipulated or destroyed.”

Bishops of Wisconsin

 

VOTE FOR LIFE!

 

 


44 posted on 10/16/2012 10:04:44 PM PDT by Salvation ("With God all things are possible." Matthew 19:26)
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To: Salvation
A Christian Pilgrim

SAINT MARGARET MARY ALACOQUE [1647-1690]

FEAST: 16 OCTOBER 

“I need nothing but God, and to lose myself in the heart of Jesus.” (From the last words of St. Margaret Mary) 

Of the many saints, both women and men, who promoted devotion to the Sacred Heart, the most well-known of the women is St. Margaret Mary Alacoque, a seventeenth-century Visitation Sister. Margaret was born in 1647 in Burgundy, France, to a family of seven children. Her father was a well-to-do notary. When Margaret was young, her father died. It was found that he had been extravagant in his expenditures, leaving the family in such poverty that eventually they ended up as servants. This brought Margaret grief for she could not see how to help her mother in her troubles, and she was not allowed to go to Mass as often as was her desire.

At twenty-two she entered the Visitation convent of Paray-le-Monial. There she devoted herself to prayer and severe penances. One day when praying in the chapel, Margaret Mary heard the Lord inviting her to take the place of St. John the Evangelist close to His Sacred Heart and to spread such devotion so that all Catholics would know of His great love for them. It was a time when many French people were caught up in Jansenism, a heresy which emphasized God’s judgment to the neglect of his mercy, so much so that many Catholics rarely frequented Holy Communion. Some Church historians regard devotion to the Sacred Heart as the remedy of the Holy Spirit for Jansenism.

For eighteen months, Margaret continued to experienced special revelations. When she described them to her superior, this nun thought that the experiences were not authentic. Devastated, Margaret became very ill. The superior thought that perhaps her doubts might be the cause and vowed that if Margaret recovered she would take it as a sign that her visions were valid. When Margaret, indeed, got better, her superior sent for some theological experts to judge her story. These rejected her story but later a Jesuit priest confirmed them and spread the devotion to the Sacred Heart in England. Eventually devotion to the Sacred Heart was spread by the preachings and writings of St. John Eudes and Blessed Columbière throughout the world. Since 1929 the feast of the Sacred Heart has been elevated to the highest rank.

For your life. Rejection by at least some of the people we love is a common experience, and one of the most painful. When agonizing over the way others refuse to receive and return our love, we can meditate on how Jesus Himself longs that we might experience if we devoted ourselves more regularly to prayer and the sacraments instead of our frantic grasping for human love and the fleeting security this world provides.

Short Prayer: Heavenly Father, Fill our hearts with the spirit of charity which You gave so abundantly to Saint Margaret Mary. May we experience the love of Christ which surpasses all knowledge, and attain to the fullness of life you destine for us. Amen.

Note: The text is taken from Ronda De Sola Chervin, Treasury of Women Saints, Makati, Metro Manila, Philippines: St. Pauls, 1994, pages 295-297. 


45 posted on 10/17/2012 9:48:10 PM PDT by Salvation ("With God all things are possible." Matthew 19:26)
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