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Daily Readings for:December 31, 2013
(Readings on USCCB website)

Collect: Come, O Lord, to the help of your people, sustained by the intercession of Pope Saint Sylvester, so that, running the course of this present life under your guidance we may happily attain life without end. 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    Eggnog

o    Flaming Brandy Punch

o    Jellied Pineapple Salad

o    New Year's Eve Punch

o    New Year's Eve: Midnight Buffet Menu

o    Spanish Eggnog

o    Sylvester Punch

ACTIVITIES

o    Christmas Play

o    Day Seven ~ Activities for New Year's Eve

o    Game of Thanks

o    Gumdrop on a String

o    Handkerchief Game

o    I Want to Be Ready

o    New Year's Eve and New Year's Day

o    New Year's Eve Family Celebration

o    New Year's Eve Party

o    Quotations Game

o    Treasure Hunt

PRAYERS

o    Christmas Morning Prayers

o    Christmas Evening Prayers

o    Christmas Table Blessing 1

o    Christmas Table Blessing 2

o    Christmas Table Blessing 3

o    Christmas Table Blessing 4

o    Book of Blessings: Blessing Before and After Meals: Christmas Season (2nd Plan)

o    An Act of Consecration of the Human Race to the Sacred Heart of Jesus

o    Book of Blessings: Blessing Before and After Meals: Christmas (1st Plan)

·         » Enjoy our Liturgical Seasons series of e-books!

·         Old Calendar: St. Sylvester I ; Other Titles: New Year's Eve

·         Today is the seventh day in the octave of Christmas. The Church celebrates the optional memorial of St. Sylvester I, pope and confessor. He ruled the Church during the reign of Constantine when the Arian heresy and the Donatist schism had provoked great discord. He convoked the first Ecumenical Council of Nicaea.

·         The Seventh Day of Christmas

·        

·          

·         St. Sylvester
St. Sylvester, a native Roman, was chosen by God to govern His holy Church during the first years of Her temporal prosperity and triumph over Her persecuting enemies. Pope Melchiades died in January, 314. St. Sylvester was chosen as his successor. He governed the Church for more than twenty-one years, ably organizing the discipline of the Roman Church, and taking part in the negotiations concerning Arianism and the Council of Nicaea. He also sent Legates to the first Ecumenical Council.

·        

During his Pontificate were built the great churches founded at Rome by Constantine — the Basilica and baptistery of the Lateran, the Basilica of the Sessorian palace (Santa Croce), the Church of St. Peter in the Vatican, and several cemeterial churches over the graves of martyrs. No doubt St. Sylvester helped towards the construction of these churches. He was a friend of Emperor Constantine, confirmed the first General Council of Nicaea (325), and gave the Church a new discipline for the new era of peace. He might be called the first "peace Pope" after centuries of bloody persecution. He also established the Roman school of singing. On the Via Salaria he built a cemeterial church over the Catacomb of St. Priscilla, and it was in this church that he was buried when he died on December 31, 335.

·         Numerous legends dramatize his life and work, e.g., how he freed Constantine from leprosy by baptism; how he killed a ferocious dragon that was contaminating the air with his poisonous breath. Such legends were meant to portray the effects of baptism and Christianity's triumph over idolatry. For a long time the feast of St. Sylvester was a holyday of obligation. The Divine Office notes: He called the weekdays feria, because for the Christian every day is a "free day" (the term is still in use; thus Monday is feria secunda.).

·         Compiled from Heavenly Friends, Rosalie Marie Levy and The Church's Year of Grace, Pius Parsch


32 posted on 12/31/2013 3:56:14 PM PST by Salvation ("With God all things are possible." Matthew 19:26)
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To: All
The Word Among Us

Meditation: John 1:1-18

7th Day within the Octave of the Nativity of the Lord

All things came to be through him. (John 1:3)

The story goes that a Catholic priest once visited the home of Albert Einstein. This priest had read an article Einstein had written years before, stating his belief that there must be an order and a plan to the universe. The priest wanted to question Einstein on it, but Einstein wanted to question him about the Mass. The priest explained transubstantiation, when bread and wine become the Body and Blood of Christ. He said it was similar to Einstein’s theory of matter being transformed into energy. Einstein replied, “Then this means that Christ is infinite and timeless.”

There is no evidence that Einstein converted to Christianity, but perhaps he would have if he had meditated on today’s Gospel reading. For John tells us that not only is God timeless and eternal, he is alive. He is not just an impersonal force to be measured but a God of love. He sent his Son, Jesus, his living Word, to save us so that we could live as his children. In Jesus, our lives have meaning and purpose. In him we can know where we came from and where we are going. In him the universe finally makes sense!

Albert Einstein spent his whole life trying to understand time and space. Where did we come from? Where are we heading? How does it all hold together? These are all excellent questions for a physicist. But they are also perfect questions for us everyday people to ponder as we sit before the Lord in prayer or Eucharistic adoration.

Especially today, the last day of the year, place yourself in the presence of the timeless, eternal, ever-present Word of God. Let him show you who you are, where you came from, and even more important, where he wants to take you. Believe that the God who is before all time—the author of time itself—has redeemed your past. He has your future in his hands. And he is walking with you every step of the way. So surrender yourself to him. Trust him, and let him breathe eternity into your heart.

“Lord, today I offer you my life, all my plans and dreams. Come and reign over my heart, Lord, and direct all my paths in the coming year.”

1 John 2:18-21; Psalm 96:1-2, 11-13


33 posted on 12/31/2013 4:22:04 PM PST by Salvation ("With God all things are possible." Matthew 19:26)
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