noname47 b Archbishop Jose Gomez

Men of Brave Heart

by Archbishop Gomez

You already know he’s the Coadjutor Archbishop of Los Angeles–which means he’ll take over the largest Catholic diocese in the United States after native Los Angelean Cardinal Roger Mahony retires on his 75th birthday.  In addition to being the first Hispanic to serve this diocese comprised of 2/3 Hispanics, he will become the highest ranking Hispanic bishop in the country.  He is also from the conservative and often misunderstood organization Opus Dei–which came under scrutiny due to some unfair depictions in popular culture.

So what does Archbishop Gomez have in store for our neck of the woods?  Well, take a sneak-peak at what this man is all about.  His book, Men of Brave Heart: The Virtue of Courage in the Priestly Life, takes a close look at the Biblical and Traditional history of the vocation of the priesthood.  It contains many real-life stories of saints, martyrs, and modern day priests and their remarkable examples of the highs and lows of this calling.

An inspiring read for priests, seminarians, and those in discernment, it also gives us an idea of the great regard Archbishop Gomez has for his centuries-old, noble vocation–a sign of how he will lead those priests who will soon come under his authority.

 

Habemus Discounts

ilpapa Habemus Discounts

 

Follow Me

That is such a frightening command: “Follow me.”  We know the path He chose is wrought with great sacrifice and suffering, culminating in excruciating, humiliating death.  What?!?  Follow you through all of that? 

In today’s Gospel reading, Jesus reveals to Peter that he will also be crucified, and tells him, “Follow me” (John 21:15-19).  Through this charge to His Apostle, we are all told that the way to Heaven is through strife and pain; we are all essentially called to martyrdom, though few will be given such an honor.

The Feast of St. Cristobal Magallanes, martry, is celebrated today.  He was a priest in Mexico during the Cristero War (1926-1929), an advocate of peace wrongfully arrested after being accused of inciting rebellion.  He was then executed, like many other priests, religious, and the faithful during this time. 

In his homily, Father shared one of the stories he read on these Mexican martyrs, about one priest detained while en route to celebrate Mass in an adjacent village.  The soldier ordered to execute the priest refused to do so on account that the priest had given his First Communion.  The solider, then, was lined up next to the priest and they were shot together.  (I tried searching for this specific story on the internet, but there were several incidents of executioners who refused direct orders only to face death themselves!)


gensym 80 m Follow Me

Blessed Miguel Pro:
20th Century
Mexican Martyr

Yes, “Follow me” is quite a daunting request.  But He has already shown us that the everlasting Heaven awaiting us is worth the temporal agony.  Let us ask these Mexican martyrs, especially St. Cristobal Magallanes, to pray for us that if the opportunity were presented to bear witness to Him by enduring the split-second sting of an executioner’s bullet, that we be a good target and stand absolutely still.

For further reading on Mexican martyrs, check out this biography in our store by Ann Ball.  Bl. Miguel Pro’s story is interesting in that the young Jesuit priest used disguises to evade his persecutors.  It was also the first time a martyrdom was captured on camera, which along with many other photographs are contained in this book. 

 

Give the Gift of Prayer


biro1 m Give the Gift of Prayer

Birthstone Rosary

Available for all 12 months.

It was not until recently that I owned my own Rosary.  One would think growing up in a devout Catholic family and going to Catholic schools, someone would’ve given me one somewhere along the line.  But no.  I purchased my first Rosary when I was already an adult.  I picked it up at a kiosk in some random flea market wandering aroung a tropical nation in Southeast Asia.  I’ve since lost that Rosary.  I guess that particular sacramental wasn’t all that important to me.  I can’t even remember what it looked like.  I just remeber being drawn to it because it looked exotic. 

The next one I bought last year, and yes, you guessed it–from Catholic Books and Gifts, before I started helping out the family.  I actually bought two of them: one small one to hang in my car (like every other Catholic), and the other one to use for its purpose–to PRAY ON (because sadly, most Rosaries end up hanging on something other than the fingers).

The small one still hangs in my car.  The other, I used for a short bit before giving it away to someone who needed it more than I did.  It wasn’t hard to part with that item either.  Besides, I had been given one since–and this one, despite it being a cheapo sacramental compared to the others I have owned, I cherish it more, I keep it in my pocket and bring it with me everywhere, and I could NEVER part with it.

Which brings me to my observation: those Rosaries purchased for oneself don’t hold as much sentimental value as the ones received as gifts.  I have experienced this both as a recipient of a Rosary and from giving one away.  I guess it’s because it was attained through an act of love.  That person who gave it to you cared enough to be concerned for your eternal soul, understood that you needed some spiritual guidance, and knew the solace you were seeking could be attained through this powerful Devotion. 

When you purchase a Rosary, you are only buying beads.  When you give or receive one, then it becomes a PRAYER.

Give one today and you’ll see what I mean.  Have a look at the Rosaries in our store.  I would suggest selecting one that in addition to aiding in the prayer, the sacramental reflects their personality or have meaning to them.  We have them in various sizes and colors, made from different materials, and in several chaplets.  A thoughtful, customized gift would be  a Rosary made with birthstones (pictured above).  We can gift wrap and include a special note in your order, too.

That is the spirit of Catholicism: we must acknowledge that we cannot attain our salvation by ourselves.  It first and foremost comes from God, and then, from the love of our fellow man. 

 

While we were serving breakfast outside our parish’s rummage sale, we saw our pastor hobbling towards our booth from the church.  He had just finished hearing Confessions.  As he neared, we noted that he looked exhausted and visibly distraught.  He wearily asked for some food, something with protein in it.  We gave him a plate of scrambled eggs, which he ate up quickly.

“Father,” we asked him, “does hearing Confessions take a lot out of you?” Implying the spiritual, emotional, and even physical aspects of it.

He managed a smile between bites.  “Yes it does.”  He wiped his mouth and continued with an analogy.  “A priest friend of mine, who had already passed, explained it like this: ‘It’s like getting stoned to death with marshmallows.’”

His friend was most likely referencing Archbishop Fulton Sheen’s quip about how hearing a nun’s Confession is like being stoned to death with popcorn.  (Or, perhaps, it was his friend who gave it to the late great Archbishop and now Servant of God–or, his friend WAS Archbishop Sheen, which would be way cooler.  Or, it’s just one of those industry inside-jokes…?)

I both do and don’t get this analogy.  I suppose it means our priests are expressing their immunity towards the sins we hurl at them.  No matter how gnarly the things we let fly, it bounces right off them and they forgive us because God forgives us.  Then again, it is getting stoned to death, the end result imminent despite the harmless, fluffy means used to attain it.  Like death by a thousand papercuts.

We are taught that it is the Lord whom we are speaking to when we confess our sins.  The conduit, however, is a human being.  He is a man who sacrifices and struggles so much to walk a path of holiness for Him, for you.  To assail him with the vile things we do, one after another after another, and for him to forgive each and every one with love–I can see why Father came out of the Confessional so famished, so haggard, the way he did.

Which brings us to today’s Gospel: in John 16:29, Jesus’ disciples go phew! when the Lord finally stopped using figurative language and spoke very plainly.  I love how the Lord tells us stories that make us really think deeper.  But when we are too dense to get it, he just tells us straight out, in plain and simple talk.  Or, He shows us.

After bringing all our sins to the cross, before surrendering His spirit to the Father, Jesus said He was thirsty (John 19:28).  I do not think this is to be taken figuratively, but a literal, deliberate request for something to drink–some alleviation from the intense suffering He was enduring for our salvation.

It is the same suffering He burdens on those He called to forgive us today.


prisnothisow m Stoned to Death by Snacks

The Priest Is
Not His Own
by Fulton Sheen

thmyprbyfujs b Stoned to Death by Snacks

Those Mysterious
Priests
by Fulton Sheen

And more books at
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Holy
Orders

 

When I hear the story of St. Matthias, I say, “What luck….”  And I say that with sincerity and sarcasm simultaneously.

Sincere because what an honor it would have been to be named one of the Twelve.  Sarcasm because to be chosen meant to suffer and die as Christ, for Christ.  Matthias, like all of the other Apostles (except for John), was martyred.

The vision I have of Matthias is as a benchwarmer, riding the pine while the all-star starting Twelve did their thing.  And in the fourth quarter, Judas scores one against his own team and then blows his guts all over the place, and so the remaining look to the bench.  Matthias and Joseph Barsabbas are the likely replacements.  And how do they decide who gets to go in?  Eeny, meeny, miny, moe (Acts 1:24-26, summarized obviously).

This notion of “casting lots” is interesting.  Drawing straws is essentially taking the decision out of the hands of men and putting it entirely in God, trusting that the result is of God’s influence and is consistent with His plan.

This led me to respond to one of our store’s supporters who wrote this post regarding what God has “burdened” us with–essentially, Allison is alluding to each of our callings on how we are to serve Him and merit Heaven.  He has given us each a unique set of talents and traits tailored to fulfilling that mission.  And what we lack, He will provide.  How we came to be the way we are may seem so arbitrary, the sum of random life experiences, the casting of lots–but we are taught by Matthias’ story that this is how we are personally selected by God, and that this had been planned for us all along.  Referring to Jeremiah in the Old Testament: “Before I formed you in the womb I knew you, before you were born I set you apart” (1:5).

I think it was Einstein who said, “Coincidences are God’s way of staying anonymous.”

Going back to that vision of Matthias.  He gets picked to get in the game.  He whips off his track suit and tightens his laces.  Does a couple of toe-touches.  He gets in the huddle.  The team captain Peter tells him, “Ok, Matthias.  Here is our game plan.  Listen carefully.  Preach the Good News of Jesus.  Lead by your example.  And then go die for Him.   Break!”


apbypobexvi m Patron Saint of Benchwarmers and Raffles

The Apostles
by Benedict XVI

 


twliofapafca m Patron Saint of Benchwarmers and Raffles

The Twelve:
The Lives of the Apostles
After Calvary


gensym 270 b Patron Saint of Benchwarmers and Raffles

The Acts of the Apostles
Bible Commentary

 

I’m not advocating dissent among the ranks of our armed forces–just the opposite, in fact.  I highly regard the importance of the chain of command and the obedience of each soldier to their superior officers–the same principle applies to the governance of the Church with the Pope as its head.  But ultimately, God’s authority and commandments are supreme–military, religious, everything.

Nereus and Achilleus, honored with Feasts today, were soldiers in the Roman army who were  “just following orders.”  Those orders, however, were to persecute Christians.  The story of their conversion is unclear though we know they abandoned their military duties to follow Christ.  They eventually died as martyrs and later canonized as Saints.

Yes, soldiers should do as told: march into harms way in defense of their nation, their loved ones, their ideals which radiate from God, to sacrifice their lives for others.  But once those orders conflict with the Lord’s way, then they must lay down their weapons.  They will face charges of insubordination and be put to shame–but they will merit great medals of valor in Heaven, placed about their necks by Jesus Himself.

The same goes in the Church: we should give our complete allegiance to those who walk with God and provide an exemplar of holiness–but we must defy those, though ordained and in a position of authority, who contradict God who is ultimate above all things.

Let us pray then that those who lead us will do so also in His name, and let us continue to pray for our soldiers.

If you know someone who is serving overseas or is about to be deployed, consider sending them one of these items to remind them who their true Commander-in-Chief really is.  (Take care not to drop the prayer book while out on patrol; as it is camouflaged, it will be hard to recover.)


militaryrosary m Just Following Orders

Military Rosary

Choose:
Men’s or Women’s,
Air Force, Army,
Marines, Navy,
or Coast Guard

arfoprbocaed m Just Following Orders

Armed Forces
Prayer Book

Booklet-sized,
English or Spanish

stmicpat m Just Following Orders

St. Michael
The Archangel
Military Medal

Choose:
Air Force, Army,
Marines, Navy,
National Guard,
or Coast Guard
 
fadaandbe b Feast of St. Damien of Molokai
Father Damien
and the Bells

When I was in the 6th grade, I did a report on Father Damien of Molokai. This was a number of years before he was beatified by JPII (in 1995) and, last year, canonized by Benedict XVI (kinda cool because I can say I knew of him before he was a Saint). I don’t remember much about the little details of his life–what I do remember are his fearlessness and self-sacrifice. Whenever the topic of giving one’s life for the Lord arises, Father Damien is always one of my leading examples as his death did not come as a result of violence.

Today’s Mass readings are quite apropos to the life of Father Damien. In the first reading (Acts 16:11-15), we see the missionaries of the early Church in the Roman colony of Philippi, where Paul finds himself preaching to some gathered women. They meet Lydia, a “seller of purple cloth,” whom the Lord opens the heart of to receive Paul’s message. After she and her family were baptized, she convinces the missionaries to stay in her home.

In the Gospel (John 15:26-27, 16:1-4), Jesus reveals to His Apostles that after He departs, He will send the Holy Spirit the Paraclete to remain with them. He tells them this to assure them in their faith, because the time will come when they will be persecuted and killed because of Him.

noname27 m Feast of St. Damien of Molokai
Apostle of
the Exiled:
St. Damien
of Molokai

It is relevant to note in the first reading that Lydia was a woman and a seller of purple cloth; these details were important to St. Luke when he wrote this account. He is trying to show us that the Lord reaches out to the marginalized: that Lydia was a woman and she was not wealthy–she made her money by selling these cloths (purple, of course, being the color associated with royalty). After having her heart opened by the Lord, after being saved by baptism, she expressed her thanks by offering accommodations to the missionaries.

Tied in to the Gospel, these missionaries were evangelizing in a Roman colony and could potentially be arrested and killed for their actions. Of course, the presence of the Holy Spirit protected their passage and “opened the hearts” of people they met to accept their teachings and take them into their own homes.  Lydia’s gesture, then, was not just one of gratitude, but one that required courage and trust in the Holy Spirit she had just received, as her harboring of these Christian missionaries could have caused her and her family’s persecution by the Romans.

Father Damien knew of the imminent death by disease when he traveled to the leper colony on Molokai. Yet, filled with the Holy Spirit’s guidance and the promise of Heaven, he evangelized to these the most marginalized of all human beings. In order to become like Christ, Father Damien served and died like Christ–lowering himself to the level of those he wished to save and died a death just like theirs, for them, and for Him.

St. Damien, pray for us.

 

I forget where I saw this quote. It has stuck with me and I often repeat it to others as advice.  It goes something like this:

“God only wrote one book….”

The rest of the phrase is completed with a barb like, “What’s your excuse for not reading it?” or, “You have an entire lifetime to read it,” etc.

I aim this directly at those rabid people who stood in line at midnight for every book in the Harry Potter or Twilight series (which in addition to being junk fiction, they glamorize witchcraft, which is very, very bad–but that is another blog post).  So yeah… of all the books we have read, some so avidly, what’s our excuse for not reading His one bible?

Let he who is without sin cast the first stone: I admit, I have not read all of the bible, nor do I read it regularly.  I did take college-level New Testament courses a decade ago that were very insightful, and I still apply what I learned in those classes when I teach catechism to my own students today.

But a personal and regular bible study as a prayer for the enrichment of my own faith? Never.  I need to start heeding my own advice.

I heard Mark Hart (author of Ask the Bible Geek) give a talk during a youth conference about how we Catholics all have bibles in our homes but we never read it–or, we use it like a fortune cookie: opening it to a random page and pointing at a random verse to see what God is trying to tell us.  Hart commented that those who have strayed from the Church use the bible against us when we were the ones who put it together in the first place.  OUR bible!  Kind of like arguing against the laws of gravity with Sir Isaac Newton, using only Newton’s laws itself as the basis, and while not floating off into the air… dumb, right?

Then, I had the privilege of interviewing apologetics author Dave Armstrong, whose own study of the bible brought him to conversion into Catholicism.  His books are about how Catholicism is entirely bible-based, contrary to what those in sola scriptura argue with us all the time.  If one wants to truly follow the Word of God, according to Armstrong’s work and living example, one must become Catholic.

Therefore, if one wants to be a good Catholic, then one needs to know the Word of God!

I remember now where I saw that quote.  It was from a billboard sponsored by a sola scriptura group.  Their intention being to encourage us Catholics to read the Sacred Scriptures with the hopes of separating us from the Traditions of our Church.  Little do they know that OUR bible, when read correctly, will only affirm and strengthen our faith.

I urge you, then, to take up reading the Catholic bible with me. Join me in discussion, debate, a sharing of information. To help you get started, there are some suggestions in our Catholic Resources page. I am also going to create a “Bible Study” section in addition to all the other stuff I blog about. Let’s have fun doing this.

And when we get to Heaven, we can ace the entrance exam.


askbigebymah m God only wrote one book...

Ask the Bible Geek
Mark Hart

bideofcabyda m God only wrote one book...

A Biblical Defense
of Catholicism
Dave Armstrong
Bibles and Bible Study
Resources