2023/05/13

What are the Graces We Would Receive From Our Lady By Praying the Three Hail Marys Daily ?

 


Promote the Practice of the Three Hail Marys Morning and Night 


St. Mechtilde of Hackeborn lived in the Thirteenth century and was the novice mistress of St. Gertrude the great -- one of the first great Mystics of the Sacred Heart of Jesus. Once, St. Mechtilde beseeched Our Lady for her special help at the hour of death. Our Lady answered; "Yes, I promise you that; but you must recite each day three Hail Marys.

By the first, address yourself to God the Father, who in His sovereign power, exalted my soul... and ask Him that I be present at the hour of your death to comfort you and to chase away all the powers of the enemy. 

By the second, address your self to God the Son, who in His unsearchable  Wisdom, endowed Me with such knowledge and understanding as to unable me to enjoy the most Holy Trinity by the knowledge superior to that of all the other Saints. you will also ask Him... to fill your soul, at the hour of death, with lights of faith and knowledge, protecting you from all ignorance and error. 

By the third, address yourself to God the Holy Ghost, who inundated me with his love... and you will ask Him that I be present at the hour of your death, to pour out on you the sweetness of Divine love. Thus you will triumph over the sorrows and the bitterness of death, until you see them transformed into the sweetness of every joy."


Other Saints 

St. Anthony also preached the devotion of the Three Hail Marys, encouraging souls to say it in honour of Mary's Immaculate purity. 

St. Leonard of Port Maurice did the same, adding that it should be said morning and night, to avoid all mortal sins. 

But St. Alphonsus Ligouri gave the greatest encouragement to this devotion in The Glories of Mary. Following him Redemptorist Missionaries often concluded their Missions encouraging souls to pray the Three Hail Marys for the grace of Purity, a good confession, and the help of Mary at the hour of death. 


Source: Knight of the Immaculata 


THE ENEMY OF OUR SOUL, AN ENEMY THAT NEVER LEAVES US - A Summary of Don Bosco Sermon





John Melchior Bosco, SDB, popularly known as Don Bosco, was an Italian Catholic priest, educator, writer and saint of the 19th century. Wikipedia
Born: August 16, 1815, Castelnuovo Don Bosco, Italy
Died: January 31, 1888, Turin, Italy
Attributes: Cassock, Biretta
Canonized: 1 April 1934, Rome by Pius XI
Feast: 31 January



 AN ENEMY THAT NEVER LEAVES US

On September 21, 1868, Don Bosco preached the second retreat to the Salesians but a summary of only two sermons have reached us. Here they are:
SUMMARY OF THE FIRST SERMON
"We have a great enemy who never leaves us alone night and day, our own body. We must resist it, lest it rebel; we must mortify it to keep it under subjection. Of this Our Lord Jesus Christ gave us a most shining example throughout His entire life. He began HIs mission by a fast of forty days and forty nights; He endured fatigue on endless walking tours; He suffered thirst and hunger, spent long nights in prayer. By self-denial and prayer He taught us how to war against the body. One who does not mortify it can't even expect to be able to pray properly. All the blessed in heaven and all good priests have followed or are following Christ's example.
The body is the oppressor of the soul. St. Augustine thus explains this spirit of rebellion: "The disobedient man finds punishment within himself in the rebellion of his own member. The soul, however, must prevail and the body must be enslaved. Left free to give itself to intemperance and vice, the body turns man into a mere animal.
Jesus Christ declared: "Unless you do penance, you shall all likewise perish." (St. Lk. 13,5). To show us how to tame this enemy, Our Lord kept repeating: "Who ever wishes to be My follower must deny his very self, take up his cross each day, and follow in My steps." (St. Lk. 9, 23).
Those attached to this earth and its comforts and pleasures must keep in mind what awaits their bodies. This body of ours, so pampered, will soon feed most loathsome worms. Away with vanities, ambitions, and self indulgence.
Observe the Friday fast; endure heat, cold, illness, and deprivations. Travel only when necessary. Through these little mortifications we shall be more fervent in prayers and victorious over temptations.
SUMMARY OF THE SECOND SERMON OF DON BOSCO
Meditation is mental prayer. We should ask Him for the graces we need and in true sorrow and tears beg His pardon for our sins. Let us always remember that God is our Father and we are His sons... Visits to the Blessed Sacrament. "Our most sweet Lord Jesus Christ is there in person," the Cure of Ars used to exclaim. If time is limited, let us at least kneel before the tabernacle and say an Our Father, Hail Mary and Glory be. This alone will steel us against temptations. I assure you that the man of faith who visits the Blessed Sacrament and makes a daily meditation with sincerity of heart will not fall into sin. I urge spiritual reading, especially to those who need a book to meditate. Let us read a passage and reflect on it to discover what needs correcting in our lives.
If possible, make your spiritual reading and your visit to the Blessed Sacrament. Remember to say the rosary daily. How grateful we should be to the Blessed Virgin who has so many graces in store for us!
Go to confession every week, even if you have nothing serious to confess. It is a pleasing act of humility to God because it re-awakens our remorse for sins already forgiven; it makes us realized how imperfect the small faults of every day make us.
Never throw back in someone's face his past offences, especially if he has been forgiven. Rather, do your best to show greater affection than before, and forget the past.
Let each of us put his conscience in order and be ready for death at any moment.
SOURCE : Don Bosco and the Priesthood

What is the meaning of human suffering? By Fr. Socrates B. Villegas


 SUFFERING HAS MEANING


Fr. Socrates B. Villegas 


A "masochist" is defined as a person who takes pleasure in their own pain. A "sadist" is one who takes pleasure in the pain of another.


If you hear the Beatitudes of our Lord for the first time, it might strike you that a Christian seems to have no other destiny but to be a masochist, in the sense that the Christian is being asked to take pleasure in their sufferings.

 

However, that is not the point of the Beatitudes. God is not asking us to find happiness in suffering, nor is He asking us to enjoy pain. Instead, God is asking us to find meaning in pain. This is a completely different issue. We are being asked to discover the meaning of human suffering. Thus, pain is no longer pain because it has been given meaning and purpose.


What is the meaning of human suffering? There are two things: 


First, human suffering brings us into communion with the sufferings of Christ; 


Second, human suffering brings us into communion with the suffering of others. When you suffer, you also remember "hindi ka nag-iisa" (you are not alone). You might think that your suffering is greater than that of others, but you must also remember that there are many other people who suffer more than you do. 


If you have lost a leg and you are brooding over it, please remember those who have lost their legs and arms. There will always be people whose suffering is greater than ours; we remember them and we express communion and solidarity with them. If you cannot find somebody who is suffering more than you, you will certainly find that Christ suffered more than all of us.


Pain is not there to be sought. Human suffering is not to be pursued. What God is asking us to do is to put meaning in the pain and suffering that we are experiencing. When the meaning is there, suffering is no longer a puzzle. Suffering has been conquered by the power of God.


Let us lift up to the Lord in sacrifice all our pains and sufferings. Perhaps they are too great to be shared with our trusted friends and loved ones. Let us ask the Lord to show us the meaning in everything that we have to undergo.



2023/05/08

POWERFUL HEALING PRAYER BY SAINT PADRE PIO



A POWERFUL HEALING PRAYER By PADRE PIO
Born in 1887 in the small farming town of Pietrelcina (Italy), Padre Pio, whose real name was Francesco Forgione, is quite famous all over the world for all the miracles and healing linked to him.
This prayer was written by St. Padre Pio himself. We are told that he believed that many people got healed through this prayer. You can say it for yourself or anyone else that needs healing. Please say this prayer trusting in God’s love for you. He always answers our prayers. Let Him take care of you and you will be healed. Padre Pio Feast Day is on 23 September.

2023/05/03

WHY DOES THE PRIEST GIVE US A PENANCE AFTER CONFESSION ?



WHY DOES THE PRIEST GIVE US A PENANCE AFTER CONFESSION ?


The priest give us a penance after confession, that we may make some atonement to God for our sins, receive help to avoid them in the future,, and make some satisfaction for the temporal punishment due to them.
1. The penance is satisfaction for sin, some penitential work imposed by the priest as a reparation to God for the offense offered to Him by sin.
In earl days of the Church, public or canonical penance was imposed for public sins. One who apostatized for fear had to do penance for seven years, during which time he was excluded from Holy Communion, and was required to fast on certain days.
2. Justice requires that an injury done to another should be repaired. One who steals must restore the stolen property. God forgave Adam's sin, but his penance lasted his whole life. In the same way our guilt is forgiven in confession, but we must make satisfaction for our sins. Our eternal punishment is forgiven, but not our temporal punishment.
Temporal punishment is the punishment or penance that we have to suffer for our sins either here on earth or in Purgatory.
One who breaks the civil law is not let off even if he is sorry. He is given a penalty imposed by the judge. How much more should the priest, the spiritual judge, impose a penalty or penance to satisfy for the offense offered to God when we commit sin!
3. Today the most common form of satisfaction is the saying of certain prayers imposed. If the sin calls for material reparation, restoration of property or a public apology is also sometimes imposed.
One should not complain if the penance given by the confessor is more than other confessors usually impose. One should instead thank God for the opportunity to make some satisfaction here on earth, thus shortening his purgatory.
4. If the penance consists of prayers, we should say it if possible as soon as we leave the confessional. It is wrong to put off the performance of a penance too long. One who intentionally omits the penance commits sin, although the sin that were forgiven do not return. To omit a penance for venial sins, would be a venial sin; a serious penance for mortal sins, would be grievous.
 
Source: My Catholic Faith







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