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Catholic Culture

 

Daily Readings for: September 18, 2013
(Readings on USCCB website)

Collect: Look upon us, O God, Creator and ruler of all things, and, that we may feel the working of your mercy, grant that we may serve you with all our heart. Through our Lord Jesus Christ, your Son, who lives and reigns with you in the unity of the Holy Spirit, one God, for ever and ever.

RECIPES

o    None

ACTIVITIES

o    Patron Saints and Namedays

o    Religion in the Home for Elementary School: September

o    Religion in the Home for Preschool: September

PRAYERS

o    September Devotion: Our Lady of Sorrows

o    Collect for St. Joseph of Cupertino

Ordinary Time: September 18th

Wednesday of the Twenty-Fourth Week of Ordinary Time

Old Calendar: St. Joseph of Cupertino, Confessor

St. Joseph of Cupertino (1603-1663) was born at Cupertino, Italy, and died in Osimo. He was of lowly origin and had little formal education. In his youth he was employed as an apprentice to a shoemaker. He joined the Conventual Franciscans as a lay brother but was later ordained a priest. He was noted for his great austerities, his angelic purity, his great devotion to Our Lady and especially for his ardent love of God. According to the 1962 Missal of Bl. John XXIII the Extraordinary Form of the Roman Rite, today is his feast.


St. Joseph of Cupertino

Joseph of Cupertino was such an extraordinary saint that his fellow-Christians could scarcely cope with him. First of all he was forgetful, even as a child, often not turning up for the scanty meals his impoverished widowed mother prepared. He would wander about the village of Cupertino, Italy, where he was born, gazing open-mouthed at everything. He found it hard to learn. And he was clumsy.

When he was seventeen he decided he wanted to become a monk or friar. The Franciscans would not take him because, they said, he was too stupid. The Capuchins threw him out after eight months because he broke everything. Eventually a Franciscan house at La Grotella accepted him as a stableboy.

He prayed and fasted and did his best to perform every task to perfection. Eventually the delighted brothers decided to accept him as one of their equals, and in 1628 he was ordained priest. From that time onwards Joseph of Cupertino was continually passing into ecstatic trances, sometimes even appearing to float above the ground. No meals could be taken in the monastery without some extraordinary interruption because of Joseph's miraculous behaviour. For thirty-five years the community decided that he should be kept out of the choir and refectory.

Naturally enough his miracles and above all the reports of his supernatural levitations attracted countless curious visitors. In 1653 the church authorities transferred him to a Capuchin friary in the hills of Pietarossa and kept him completely out of sight. Finally Saint Joseph was allowed to join his own order at a place called Osima, but he was still kept out of sight until his death in 1663. All this he bore without the remotest complaint. Fittingly the twentieth century has made the saint patron of pilots and airline passengers.

Excerpted from A Calendar of Saints by James Bentley

Patron: air travellers; astronauts; aviators; paratroopers; pilots; students; test takers.

Symbol: airplane.

Things To Do:


22 posted on 09/18/2013 3:03:05 PM PDT by Salvation ("With God all things are possible." Matthew 19:26)
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To: All
The Word Among Us

Meditation: Psalm 111:1-6

24th Week in Ordinary Time

Great are the works of the Lord! (Psalm 111:2)

That you are reading this meditation is a work of the Lord. That you know him at all is his work. That you acknowledge him, praise him, and worship him is his work. That you spend time in his presence and receive his Body and Blood in the Eucharist is his work. That you repent and accept his forgiveness—this, too, is his work.

Great are these works: perfect and delightful, beautiful and intricate! They are wondrous, nonetheless so because they occur in you. Who can change his own heart or procure grace for himself? None of us can manufacture this kind grace or this depth of mercy. The best we can do is humbly receive all that God graciously offers us. The best we can do is rejoice in the grace that is the hallmark of our lives.

Give thanks, then! You are always in God’s thoughts. You occupy a special place in his heart. Even before you were born, he knew you and loved you. To this day, he cherishes and delights in you! God is for you, and his word is always at work in you. So, too, is his great power, through which he does vastly more than you can ask or imagine.

Great are all God’s works! He has sustained the Church for more than two thousand years, in spite of human weaknesses, failures, misunderstandings, and willful rebellion. He has continually fed us on his word in Scripture, inspired us with the lives of the saints, and, century after century, made known his works to new generations. He has revealed himself as the bread of life so that our hunger can always be satisfied. He is a fountain of living water so that we need never thirst.

What are some of God’s great works in your life? How has he revealed himself to you? As Father, brother, friend? Warrior, savior, redeemer? Deliverer, comforter, healer? Maybe you have felt his love, his compassion, or his understanding in a particularly personal way. If any of this applies to you, then spend you prayer time today thanking and praising him for it. Then tell someone about the God who has worked in you. Tell them how great are his works!

“Father, great are your works in and through me. Thank you for your goodness and kindness, today and always!”

1 Timothy 3:14-16; Psalm 111:1-6; Luke 7:31-35


23 posted on 09/18/2013 3:26:44 PM PDT by Salvation ("With God all things are possible." Matthew 19:26)
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