St. John's Adoration Chapel

St. John's Adoration Chapel
"Do Not Fear: I am with you. From here I will cast light Be sorry for sin."

Wednesday, August 31, 2011

September 1, 2011 With Blessed Father Alberione and With Father Tom


I found this image on the internet and will gladly give credit to the artist.



Thursday, September 1
OF THE DAY
First Thursday of the month—the Guardian Angels
Col 1 9-14
Lk 5: 1-11

MONTLY INTENTION

That there be in the Church an increase in the number of priests, religious and laity who, consecrated as apostles of social communication, will make resound throughout the world the message of salvation (Pauline Offertory)

never was the need of apostles so great…and never were there so few of them. That means that you and I must work harder…and harder …and harder!


Please Pray for Our Deceased: Sr. M. Zefirinia Baldi (FSP 1947)—Sr. Cecilia Campagna FSP (1963)—Sr. M. Rita Simaz PD (1980)—Sr. M. Luigina Salva FSP (1992)—Sr. M. Daniela Vezzulli FSP (1997)—Sr. M. Adalgisa Tavlla PD (2003)—Ninfa Visconti HFI (2009)—St. Agostinha Boff FSP (2010)

August 31, 2011 With Blessed Father Alberione and With Father Tom

Wednesday, August 31
OF THE DAY
Col 1 1-8
Lk 4: 38-44



Another month has come to an end. As it has for these deceased brothers and sisters. Some day my name will be on the list and yours also if you become a Perpetual. THEN it will be too late to say “IF ONLY…I had done this, IF ONLY…I had done that.” Let’s DO IT NOW! Put the Master in the first place in our lives, examine ourselves frequently and especially at the end of each month. I wish you many more “Augusts” and that they may be great ones!


Please Pray for Our Deceased:Guglielmo Stracciati HFI (1986)—Sr. Melania Lovato FSP (2002)—Sr. Concetta Anzalone SGBP (2006)


Tuesday, August 30, 2011

August 30, 2011 With Blessed Father Alberione and With Father Tom

Tuesday, August 30
OF THE DAY
1 Th 5: 1-6; 9-11
Lk 4: 31-37

In the world there are cooperators of the devil who sow evil and error. Let us be cooperators of Christ, who sow good, truth and grace (FSP 42).

Is my work really important? Is yours? Not just “important” but INDISPENSIBLE!! If you and I don’t do our best within our limits then there is a G-A-P in God’s work which will not be filled. So.. let’s do at least our best to serve the Lord!


Sr. M. Teresita Herrero PD (1949)—Sr. M. Eufrosina Nicolo PD (1971)—Fr. Mirco Cerato SSP (1997)—Cosimo Pendinelli HFI (2005)—Bro Francesco Chessa SSP (2007)—Vittorio Santini HFI (2008)—Helen Mosebarger (1996)

Monday, August 29, 2011

August 29, 2011 With Blessed Father Alberione and With Father Tom

Monday, August 29
MARTYRDOM OF JOHN THE BAPTIST
Jer 1: 17-19
Mark 6: 17-29

To become apostles we have to love souls. One who truly loves souls tries to make them share the highest good (FSP).

A sobering thought: what aspect of other peoples’ lives REALLY concerns us? The answer is not as simple as we might think. Perhaps we are concerned more about the job they are looking for than the state of their spiritual lives? More about how bad they look to the neighbors when divorced, than how they look spiritually in that state?


Please Pray for Our Deceased: Sr. M. Tomasina Morelli PD (1989)—Sr. Bianca Giordano FSP (2000)—Fr. Stefano Cane SSP (2000)—Sr. M. Antonietta Marazza FSP (2001)—Bro Manuel Regueiro SSP (2004)

Growing Older Gracefully (Fr. Jeffrey Mickler)

Sunday, August 28, 2011

August 28, 2011 With Blessed Father Alberione and With Father Tom

Suday, August 28
XXII SUNDAY IN ORDINARY TIME
St. Augustine
Jer 20: 7-9
Rm 12: 1-2
Mt. 16: 21-27

Some people make holiness difficult—let’s try to simplify it, speak to the Master with simplicity. All His words and prayers are both simple and profound (VMC 808).

So should ours be and , it possible, they should be personal. I like to think of “Meditation” not only as reflecting on how things should be, but even more as apologizing to the Lord for the way they are—that’s REAL prayer and it’s YOURS!


Please Pray for Our Deceased: Sr. M. Consila Fusaro PD (1955)—Raimondo Martinet HFI (2005)—Fr. Emilio Cordero SSP (2010)—Goffreda Ferri HFI (2010).

Saturday, August 27, 2011

August 27, 2011 With Blessed Father Alberione and With Father Tom

Saturday, August 27
OF THE DAY
St. Monica
1 Thes 4: 9-11,
Mt 25: 14-30

That we may be always enlightened and , in turn, try to enlighten. Let us enlighten using the word, good example and all the means of social communication.


Whatever about the means, let's use the word and good example which is the most powerful force there is. Good example in the home, at work, in church, in recreation (if you need it!) and, in a word EVERYWHERE!


Please Pray for Our Deceased: All those in the Pauline family, in our Parish families, who have most claim on our prayers, and all those who have no one to pray for them or are in most need.

Friday, August 26, 2011

August 26, 2011 With Blessed Father Alberione and With Father Tom

Friday, August 26
OF THE DAY
1 Thes 4: 1-8,
Mt 25: 1-13

The grace of God always supports those who use common sense and prudence and especially in times of temptation.

And in other times as well. God is always at the beginning, the middle and the end of our actions! Common sense and prudence? Well, yes, but very often it is a false prudence, leading us to wait "for another time," for "the right moment." In most cases the right time is NOW! Especially talking of new HFI members.


Please Pray for Our Deceased: All those in the Pauline family, in our Parish families, who have most claim on our prayers, and all those who have no one to pray for them or are in most need.

Thursday, August 25, 2011

August 25, 2011 With Blessed Father Alberione and With Father Tom

Thursday, August 25
OF THE DAY
St. Luis of France; Joseph Calasanz
1 Thes 3: 7-13,
Mt 24: 42-51

We must have the right ideas. The first love of God is in the mind that thinks well and rightly.


Of course. Everything begins in the mind. When your mind is working on the right lines, your life makes sense - but you can always use some help. Jesus Master, sanctify my mind and increase my faith."


Please Pray for Our Deceased: All those in the Pauline Family, in our Parish families, who have most claim on our prayers, and all those who have no one to pray for them or are in most need.

Wednesday, August 24, 2011

August 24, 2011 With Blessed Father Alberione and With Father Tom

Wednesday, August 24
OF THE DAY
St. Bartholomew
Rev 21: 9b-14,
Jn 1: 45-51

Great importance should be given to prayer using the common formulae, the particular methods, the various spiritualities, end up shattering unity and that unity must be unity in thought, action, piety and spirit

To repeat: this unity does not mean simply reciting the prayers in the Prayer Booklet. There is a much larger Prayer Book ofering more variety- do you have one? And of course, best of all is simple dialog with the Master of Our Lady (or St. Paul??)


Please Pray for Our Deceased: All those in the Pauline Family, in our Parish families, who have most claim on our prayers, and all those who have no one to pray for them or are in most need.

Tuesday, August 23, 2011

August 23, 2011 With Blessed Father Alberione and With Father Tom

Tuesday, August 23
OF THE DAY
St. Rose of Lima, Virgin
1 Th 2: 1-8,
Mt 23: 23-26

The Congregation is, like the Church, the mystical Body of Christ. If the blood that circulates is not good, the whole Congregation suffers. When the observance of the regulations is neglected…the whole Congregation feels the damage (FSP 41).

Precisely. Couldn’t say it better myself! Now…what are we going to do about it?


Please Pray for Our Deceased: Sr. M. Firmina Furnari PD (1954)—Sr. M. Spiritina Marzullo PD (1987)—Sr. M. Carola Toniutti FSP (1997)—Fr. Bruno Cialletti SSP (1997)-- Sr. M. Fausta Pasini FSP (2006)—Sr. M. Matelda Zuin PD (2009)


Monday, August 22, 2011

August 22, 2011 With Blessed Father Alberione and With Father Tom

Monday, August 22
QUEENSHIP OF THE BLESSED VIRGIN MARY
Is 9: 1-6,
Lk 1: 26-38

Mary in Heaven is exalted above the saints and angels and in that blessed kingdom is especially Queen of mercy. From there she thinks of us and prays for us (BM 396).

I renew my suggestion to practice addressing Our lady as “Queen of Apostles”. In the beginning it seems a little awkward… but practice makes perfect!


Please Pray for Our Deceased: Sr. Anania Gilardi FSP (1987)—Sr. Renata Innocenza Bertolusso FSP (2010)

Sunday, August 21, 2011

A Special Prayer




God, I thank You for the love that has brought me into existence. Heal in me whatever makes it difficult for me to love others. Let me recognize the sun of your love shining upon me in every aspect of life today. Give me sharp spiritual eyes to be alert to the ways You are at work in my life. My lowliness, sin, limitations, failures, things undone, duties not attended to, people offended—all these I place in your hands. I trust Your love.


Mary, you who were the first to receive the Holy Spirit at the dawn of the messianic age, pray for me and with me that I may be worthy of the favor that God bestows upon me. Walk with me in my efforts to cooperate with God’s action in bringing about the fullness of God’s reign where all are loved.


~ From: Mary’s Song: Living Her Timeless Prayer (p. 39) by Mary Catherine Nolan, O.P.

The Holy Father is Always the Successor of Peter

The Holy Father...is always

the successor of Peter




August 21 - XXI Sunday in Ordinary Time


The main item in today's liturgy is surely the Gospel where we have a fundamental statement from the lips of Christ about the identity of his shaky apostle and - in all subsequent centuries the identify of Peter's successors.


Matthew begins his Gospel with a list of the ancestors of Jesus while Luke brings them in at Chapter 3 and in both lists we read the name of Eliakim, one of the ancestors of Jesus. Eliakim, highlighted in the First Reading is mentioned twice in 2 Kings as an official of the king's palace and in Is. 22 he gets a significant promotion, is given the key to the house of David (an iron bar in that context ) is dressed elegantly and is even compared to a peg, the reference being to the peg or pegs that hold a tent in place. All this is a bit overwhelming when applied to Peter who is a distinctly loose peg at the human level but, in spite of that, is specially chosen by the Master to remain firm in the faith. And the conclusion has to be that the Church is founded on faith in Christ and not on any human ability.


The Responsorial Psalm,N/b> as usual, is a confirmation of the main message in the First Reading but is it not also a beautiful prayer for personal use?


We continue our extracts from Romans and in the Second Reading our Father, who has been reflecting all through the Letter on the problem of the Jews and their inability to see things as he sees them, now concludes with what he calls "a secret truth" involving salvation for the Gentiles but also in due course for the Jews. Stunned by this realization of the goodness of God and the depths of His wisdom, Paul bursts out in this impressive display of love and admiration.


The Gospel is fundamental, but not quite as simple as it is given here. There is no dispute about Peter's confession of faith but the reply of Christ is found only in today's extract from Matthew and not in the other Evangelists who confirm Peter's reply but do not mention the Lord's words in this context, although they have parallel statements in other parts of their Gospels. Other Christian groups are well aware of this difference and, even admitting that it is correct, they ask: does this promise apply also to Peter's successors? The Church responds by noting that the Lord changes Peter's name on this occasion (this practice is noted also in the Old Testament, e.g. Abraham and Abram) and this has considerable symbolism. As for his successors, why would it not apply and who would otherwise be the next Pope? History proves that after Peter's death there is no record of confusion in the ranks of his followers or of disputes about his successor (though there were disputes in much later centuries due to human weakness). Conclusion: the Holy Father is always the "successor of Peter" (as the present Pope describes himself rather than as "Vicar of Christ," a title used in the past).


~ August 2011 Concord

August 21, 2011 With Blessed Father Alberione and With Father Tom

Sunday, August 21
XX1 SUNDAY IN ORDINARY TIME
Is 22: 19-23,
Rm 11: 33-36,
Mt 16: 13-20

Often it is extremely difficult to convert priests and religious—they tend to deceive themselves and then God’s judgment comes as a shock(VMC 791).

This comment would have come as a shock in past years, but not today. Unfortunately, we see priests and religious all over the world in very much need of conversion. Fortunately, some of them at least have been given time to repent and in the future we may hope for real pastors of souls and dedicated lives.


Please Pray for Our Deceased: Sr. Angiolina Moscardo FSP (1962)—Sr. M. Dionisia Bertero PD (1978)—Bro Bernardo Aguilar SSP (1994)—Sr. Beniamina Pttaro FSP (1995)—Sr. Ausilia Aimasso FSP (2009)—Fr. Carmelo Panebianco SSP (2010)

Saturday, August 20, 2011

August 20, 2011 With Blessed Father Alberione and With Father Tom

Saturday, August 20
ST. BERNANRD, Abbot and Doctor
Ru 2: 1-3, 8-11
Mt 23: 1-12

1914: Foundation Day of the Pauline Family

At the Equator people say: “it’s too hot here!” AT the Poles they might say: “it’s too cold!” True, but the essential for every place we live is charity and a spirit of sacrifice. They Commandments are the same everywhere. (VMC 790).

And so are the challenges to what we would like to accomplish. But challenges are not an issue: they’re the exam. What counts if we pass or fail.


Please Pray for Our Deceased: Msgr. Nicola Riezo IJP (1998)—Fr. Giuseppe Gori SSP (2006)—Fr. Lorenzo Viberti SSP (2006)—Fr. Joao Guido Dos Santos SSP (2008)—Epigenia Jamais (1976)—Joseph Russell (1992)

Friday, August 19, 2011

August 19, 2011 With Blessed Father Alberione and With Father Tom

Friday, August 19
OF THE DAY
St. John Eudes, priest
Ru 1: 1, 3-6, 14b-16, 22
Mt 22: 34-40

“Sorrow for sin,” involves an habitual awareness of our sins, our defects, our short-comings joined to a fervent prayer for God’s mercy (VMC 789).

Once in a while the good Master removes the blindness and the forgetfulness from our minds and we see with displeasure that we have so much to account for. This is a special grace for which we can never thank Him enough.


Please Pray for Our Deceased: Fr. Nevio Picco SSP (1998)—Sr. M. Pia Di Dio FSP (2003)—Vermigliana Rossini HFI (2003)—Sr. Angela Costantin SGBP (2008)—Ilva Cieri HFI (2008)—Sr. M. Liliana Ventresca FSP (2010)

Thursday, August 18, 2011

August 18, 2011 With Blessed Father Alberione and With Father Tom

Thursday, August 18
OF THE DAY
Jdg 11: 29-39
Mt 22: 1-15

It is not enough that the Gospel or a good book enter a house. It must be read and its teaching practiced. Our prayers are requested if this is going to happen (ESP 29).

Book without prayer = book. Book plus prayer and sacrifice = apostolate. That’s surely not a new idea, but it needs to be repeated “ad nauseam”.


Please Pray for Our Deceased: Cleric Gesualdo Angella SSP (1938)—Sr. M. Francesca Franchini FSP (1974)—Sr. M. Provvidenza Giordano PD (1985)—Raimondo Manca HFI (1991)—Bro Corrado Siccardi SSP (2003)—Cresenciana Agilera Quiroz IAM (2004)—Fr. Gabriele Todaro SSP (2010)—Lucio Alba no (1971)

Wednesday, August 17, 2011

August 17, 2011 With Blessed Father Alberione and With Father Tom

Wednesday, August 17
OF THE DAY
Jdg 9: 6-15
Mt 20: 1-6

Feel the divine zeal for souls as Jesus Christ felt it. Make known His teaching by using the fastest and most progressive means (SP (1949)

At least make Him known in terms of the Institute not by “the fastest and most progressive means” but rather by the means available to all of us: word of mouth, person to person, founding our action on prayer and sacrifice.


Please Pray for Our Deceased: Elena Bertella IAM (1990)—Sr. M. Amalia Bernardini FSP (2003)—Bro James Mann SSP )2010)—Claudina Spallacci HFI (2010)—Mary Grace Boyar (1982)

Tuesday, August 16, 2011

August 16, 2011 With Blessed Father Alberione and With Father Tom

Tuesday, August 16
OF THE DAY
St. Stephen of Hungary
Jdg 6: 11-24
Mt 19: 29-30

We can fail because of our lack of perseverance or lack of faith. God cannot and He never fails us (VMC 788).

Indeed, but we have to have plenty of patience apart from the faith. God can do all things in an instant but there are many other factors in even the simplest situation that He has to take account of and so there are delays…


Please Pray for Our Deceased: Sr. M. Flora Oyama FSP (1971)—Sr. Eufemia Morando FSP (1983)—Bro. Barnardino Boschetti SSP (1995)—Fr. Joseph Chircop SSP (1995)—Sr. M. Felicita Barbaduomo PD (2001)—Margarita Antonia Solis HFI (2002)—Fr. Pacifico Butani IJP (2004)—Sr. M. Filippina Brisindi PD (2009)—Sr. M. Siuseppina Di Miceli FSP (2010)

Monday, August 15, 2011

August 15, 2011 With Blessed Father Alberione and With Father Tom

Monday, August 15
THE ASSUMPTION OF THE BLESSED VIRGIN MARY
Rev 11, 19a; 12:1-6a; 10ab
Cor 15: 20-27
Lk. 1: 39-56

Mary is our mother to help us live well and to save us. Pray to the Blessed Virgin in the morning, at noon ad in the evening.

Yes, and the ideal prayer is the Angelus. If you don’t say it very often, today is a great day to begin!


Please Pray for Our Deceased: Bro Salvatore Porcaro SSP (1982)—Sr. M. Joseph Coraddu FSP (1985)—Fr. Remo De Angelis IJP (1999)—M. Zulmmira M. Pereira IAM (1999)—Annamaria Dessi HFI (2002)—Pedro Lopez (2008)

Sunday, August 14, 2011

The Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary




"All honor to you, Mary!
Today

raised above the angels! "





August 15 - Assumption of the B.V.M.


We know nothing of how the Virgin's earthly life ended but the event has been celebrated in different ways from the early days of the Church and originally it had such names as Dormitio (= falling asleep), Natale (= birthday) or Transitio (= passing). In the middle of the fifth century the Feast appears in the liturgical books of that period and it persisted up to 1950 when it was honored with a dogmatic definition by Pope Pius XII.(I vividly recall actually listening with the other seminarians on the radio in Alba while the Holy Father spoke).


The First Reading is not actually talking about Our Lady - and indeed the references to a woman in childbirth are not exactly what we think of when we speak about this Feast. The quotation from the Book of Revelation by John the Evangelist referred originally to the Woman, the bride of God who brings forth the Messiah and this is the true Israel, the Chosen People from whom the Lord was born.. In this sense, therefore, there is a connection because the Lord was also born of Mary.


The is somewhat on the same lines but more understandable: the quasi-infinite merits and spiritual beauty of Mary assumed into heaven are seen as being totally pleasing to God.


The Second Reading is easier to understand but it refers to Christ, not Our Lady, though of course she is the reason we have him. And so she has had an indispensable role in the great story of Redemption when all of us will "be brought to life in Christ." St. Paul specifies: " Christ as the first fruits and then after the coming of Christ, all those who belong to him." Clearly, Mary will take the lead in that great procession of men and women who have lived well on earth and now, after the Resurrection, will live forever in eternity (probably,in my understanding, on the earth we have today but of course in vastly different conditions which we cannot even guess).


The Gospel is, the well-known one, highlighting the joy and exultation of a young Nazareth teenager who has heard the most stunning announcement ever made to human being but who has reacted with remarkable maturity, clear sign of her special privilege of immunity form all defects. It is not difficult to understand that this extraordinary young lady, after living perfectly an ordinary mother's life which then ended in a grim tragedy as she had to stand by her crucified Son, was supremely worthy of being assumed into heaven.


~August 2011 Concord

She Beat the Master in an Argument!

She beat the Master…

in an argument!




August 14 - XX Sunday in Ordinary Time


The Liturgy today underlines the "Catholic" nature of the Church. All three Readings deal with the Jewish people, with their beliefs and their very marked conviction that they are the Chosen people, practicing a faith received directly from God.Quite true. But then comes the catch: they are right and everybody else is wrong - especially this turn-coat called "Paul" and his weird ideas!


In the First Reading, however, we see that the problem is not new. The Jews in Old Testament times were surrounded by pagans but Isaiah makes it clear that it is not their nationality that makes pagans acceptable to God but rather their readiness to accept the conditions God requires. This remains true also today.


The Responsorial Psalm conveys the same idea: "Let ALL the peoples praise you, O God." We are all members of the same human race notwithstanding superficial external differences.


St. Paul in the Second Reading is writing with feeling and with force: he is super-convinced of the divine call to conversion and the true faith given also to the pagans and he underlines this in the hope that his Jewish brethren will be stirred perhaps to jealousy but then to faith. This unfortunately still has not happened to any significant degree but Paul has not abandoned his people: the pagans were originally out in the cold but now have the faith offered to them. May this happen also to the Jewish people and bring about a real "resurrection!"


The Gospel, with its fascinating dialog between the Master and a pagan woman, reminds us of a similar encounter between Jesus and the Woman at the Well. But there are differences: at the Well the Lord was tired and thirsty but yet utterly ready to "share the Word" with all and sundry. In this Gospel he seems in top form, apparently refusing a desperate request for help but in reality leading the anxious lady to express more and more faith in him until in the end he pays her a wonderful compliment: "Great is your faith!" (This seems to express what he meant better than the rather flat: "You have great faith." )And once again the point is made: the Gospel is preached also to pagans and salvation is theirs if they want it.


This is also the only time that the Master was beaten in an argument - and to think he crossed swords with the ultra-smart religious leaders and left them speechless!


~August 2011 Concord

August 14, 2011 With Blessed Father Alberione and With Father Tom

Sunday, August 14
XX SUNDAY IN ORDINARY TIME
Is 56: 1, 1-7
Rm 11: 13-32
Mt. 15: 21-28

When there is no faith, our life has no “root” and when there is no root… the plant dies (VMC 788).

Faith? Do we have it in fact? Is our “faith” self-confidence? Good judgment? A certain recklessness? Special intelligence? We have to pray for real faith and realize that we need it badly.


Please Pray for Our Deceased: Fr. Salvatore Alessandria SSP (1966)—Sr. Elvira Pusceddu FSP (1979)—Sr. Marcella Voerzio FSP (1980)—Sr. M. Palma Salzani FSP (1983)—Fr. Antonio Diaferia SSP (1990)—Bro Giancarlo Cavazza SSP (1992)—Sr. M. Rosangela Isano Natsuko FSP (1996)—Sr. Mary Joseph Shirai FSP (2000)—Fr. Pio Bracchi SSP (2001)—Bro Rosario Scarnato SSP (2009)—Sr. M. Claudia Parco FSP (2010)

Saturday, August 13, 2011

EWTN Family Prayer-- For Mothers

August 13, 2011 With Blessed Father Alberione and With Father Tom

Saturday, August 13
OF THE DAY
ST. PONTIAN, Pope, Martyr, St. Hippolytus, priest
Jos. 24: 14-29
Mt. 19: 13-15

Jesus Knows that we are proud, headstrong, ignorant and with many defects. The secret is to have trust in Him and not in ourselves.

No comment!


Please Pray for Our Deceased: Fr. Luigi Cocco SSP (1961)—Sr. M. Rosario Zapata FSP (1970)—Luigi Madeddu HFI (1990)—Sr. Timotea Ferraretto FSP (1998)—Francesco Scotti, Gabrielite (1999)—Fr. Domenico Maggi IJP (2001)—Sr. Rosaria Romanisio FSP (2003)—Sr. Ignazia Balla FSP (2003)—Sr. M. Cunegonda Marletta PD (2007)—Bro Cipriano Caneva SSP (2009)

Friday, August 12, 2011

August 12, 2011 With Blessed Father Alberione and With Father Tom

Friday, August 12
OF THE DAY
St. Jane Frances de Chantal, Religious
Jos. 24: 1-13
Mt. 19: 3-12

The soul united to God has only one word: love, and all his or her prayers are expressions of love for God. Even if something is asked for, this is always marked by a readiness to accept what is for the glory of God (VMC 762).

Are we close to eternity? How are my prayers from tnis point of view—and how are yours?


Please Pray for Our Deceased: Sr. M. Paolina Bellia PD (1962)—Sr. Mary Bridida Canchela FSP (1992)—Sr. M. Sepranza Allegri FSP (1998)—Sr. M. Marcellina Cardoz FSP (2006)—Sr. Emanuela Iacovelli FSP (2007)—Bro Amos Schibuola SSP (2009)—Andy Veig (1960)

Thursday, August 11, 2011

August 11, 2011 With Blessed Father Alberione and With Father Tom

Thursday, August 11
ST. CLARE, Virgin
Jos. 3: 7-17
Mt. 18: 21-19:1

The closer we are to eternity, the more we should strive to live in charity. This is the principal virtue of perfect souls (VMC 757).

Are we close to eternity? We don’t really know the answer to this important question and so living in charity is always the way to live.


Please Pray for Our Deceased: Bro. Giovanni Marengo SSP (1974)—Ines Besana IAM (1975)—Fr. Ivo Micheletti IGS (1989)—Rosana Gil de Valencia HFI (2001)—Antonietta Giorgio IAM (2004)—Sr. M. kAmabile D’Addario FSP (2009)—Robert McGready (1990)—Ruth Mahoney, Gennie Davison, Dr. Martha (no years)

Wednesday, August 10, 2011

August 10, 2011 With Blessed Father Alberione and With Father Tom

Wednesday, August 10
ST. LAWRENCE, Deacon and Martyr
2 Cor. 9: 6-10
Jn.. 12: 24-26

Charity transforms us into other Christs. Indeed when the preachers preach, the real preacher is Jesus, if they are close to Him in love for Him and for others (VMC 754).

So also the Pauline “preachers” who preach with the media. And here we have the old question: is Jesus preaching through them or are they merely making noise?.


Please Pray for Our Deceased: Raimondo Falapi HFI (1981)—Fr. José Torres SSP (1995)—Sr. M. Lucia Ricci PD (2001)—Carminda Cerqueira Goncalves IAM (2005)—Sr. Domitilla Ovi FSP (2008)—Rosalia Bellavista HFI (2009)

Tuesday, August 9, 2011

August 9, 2011 With Blessed Father Alberione and With Father Tom

Tuesday, August 9
ST. TERESA BENEDICTA OF THE CROSS, Virgin, Martyr,
Dt. 31: 1-8
Mt. 18: 1-5, 10, 12-14

In Jesus Christ we find the good wine. Other authors give some wine, but plenty of water and indeed many replace the Gospel thinking with their own—pride leads them to attempt to speak for God (VMC 730).

We have the writing of the Founder plus the great classics of Francis de Sale plus, of course, the Gospels and Letters of St. Paul. (Or perhaps a study of St. Paul of which there are many.).


Please Pray for Our Deceased: Sr. M. Tecla Bassi FSP (1983)—Sr. M. Ester Meleri FSP (2001)—Sr. Leus Abuda FSP (2007)—Sr. Camilla De Simoni9 FSP (2007)—Sr. Marta Gabrielli SGBP (2010)—Julia Zink (1989)—Romeo Flora (1971)

Monday, August 8, 2011

August 8, 2011 With Blessed Father Alberione and With Father Tom

Monday, August 8
ST. DOMINIC, priest
Dt. 10: 12-22
Mt. 17: 22-27

Spirituality is to be found entirely in the Gospel and the Letters of St. Paul—if you have these two you have everything (VMC 729)

Plus, of course, what you receive from the Institute – the Gospel is generic, the materials specific. As for other spiritual books…


Please Pray for Our Deceased: Francesca Uselli Bacchitta AM (1977)—Srm M. Antonina Barone PD (1983)—Fr. Robero Della Valle SSP (1992)—Fr. Roberto Caso IJP (1998)—Sr. M. Teresia Nakashima FSP (2000)—Sr. Vittoria Stupino FSP (2001)—Sr. M. Bernarda Vizio PD (2001)—Sr. M. Bernarda Vizio PD (2001)—Bro. Daniele Mantovani SSP (2001)—Adolfo Garcia HFI (2004)—Ileano Pianella HFI (2006)—Angela Moleri Lamera HFI (2010).

Sunday, August 7, 2011

August 7, 2011 With Blessed Father Alberione and With Father Tom

Sunday, August 7
19th Sunday in Ordinary Time
First Sunday of the month—Jesus the Divine Master

1: Kg 19: 9, 11-13a
Rom 9: 1-5
Mt 14: 22-33

People who speak too much tend to lose everything and the Master's voice passes them by because they are too busy to listen to it.

If this rule holds, the Founder dis not miss much of what the Lord said - his silence was habitual. It's a practice we can all imitate. If we speak too much . . . let it be to God!


Please Pray for Our Deceased: All those in the Pauline Family, in our Parish families, who have most claim on our prayers, and all those who have no one to pray for them or are in most need.

Real Trust in God...

Real trust in God takes a

lifetime of painful denials



August 7 - XIX Sunday in Ordinary Time


The First Reading speaks of an encounter between the prophet and God Almighty - Who, however, is not to be found except we look for Him in the little details of life The sound and fury were impressive, but the Lord is never to be found in the "great" events of life - rather the opposite. And we have to wait for the right moment and be ready for the Lord's coming always. This reminds us that prayer is never wasted but the answer to prayer is often unexpected in time and place.


Nevertheless our trust in God must be total and this point is beautifully made in the Responsorial Psalm: " His help is near for those who fear him" - not a craven fear but a deep respect for His power and His goodness in using this power for our interests.


In the Second Reading from St. Paul's great Letter to the Romans, our holy Patron grieves over the state of his Jewish brethren: they have had so many gifts and signs from God and marks of benevolence for thousands of years but somehow all this waiting proved futile. When the Messiah came they failed to recognize him because they expected something great and impressive - as related in the first Reading -, but " the Lord was not in the wind" ..." the Lord was not in the earthquake." It was too great a test for their idea of how things should be and to a large extent it is so still. This can happen to all of us if we pray frequently but without true acceptance of the fact that God knows best."


The Gospel makes the same point. Peter, the impetuous, is convinced he can bridge the gap between him and his Lord in a few easy steps. No problem. Then he finds that it's not that simple and, from an overflowing self-confidence, he almost goes under. Fortunately the Master is there with his strong, supportive grasp and there is no need to choose a new Pope. The question then is: how do I and you react when our prayer seems so easy to answer but the very opposite happens? The fact is that real trust in God is not something we are born with. It takes a painful series of denials of our very reasonable requests to convince us that God is not playing games or taking pleasure in refusing us. On the contrary, His plans are much larger and more profitable for us than we could possibly imagine. But to believe that (rather than just know it) takes most of us many years and some, unfortunately, never get there.


~August 2011 Concord

Saturday, August 6, 2011

August 6, 2011 With Blessed Father Alberione and With Father Tom

Saturday, August 6
THE TRANSIFIGUARATION
First Saturday of the month—Mary Queen of Apostles

Dn 7: 9—10, 13-14
2 Pt1: 16—19
Mt 17: 1-9

Paradise will be a song to the infinite mercy of God, to Jesus redeemer and savior, to the Holy Spirit, life of the soul.

True, but the song begins HERE. Death just REVEALS what we have done. It doesn't add to it. It's now . . .or NEVER!


Please Pray for Our Deceased: All those in the Pauline Family, in our Parish families, who have most claim on our prayers, and all those who have no one to pray for them or are in most need.

Friday, August 5, 2011

Modesty Helps Women Be Friends (Jennifer Fulwiler)

My husband sent me this article via e-mail. I did not write it and have given the author full credit. It made me think it is well worth reading.


Modesty Helps Women Be Friends

by Jennifer Fulwiler Wednesday, August 03, 2011 5:35 AM Comments



One of the things I’ve found most refreshing about Catholic culture is the understanding of the importance of modesty. Though each woman may have different ideas about exactly what it means to be modest, there is a general agreement that putting forth some level of conscious effort to avoid looking like a backup dancer in a Snoop Dogg video is a good thing. And it’s fascinating to see the effect that it has on women’s interactions with one another.


When I was in my 20s, I worked at a startup company where there were no standards for appropriate dress. Over time, an unspoken tension developed among the females of the office. Sally from marketing showed up to a board meeting in a startlingly short skirt, then Jane the office manager started wearing shirts with lower and lower cuts. Kelly the analyst would turn heads when she breezed through the break room in jeans so tight they looked like they were sprayed on. And this kind of thing didn’t just happen in the office where I worked; though I wouldn’t have used this term to describe it at the time, immodesty was rampant in the culture of women who worked in that particular industry during the high-tech boom. And whether or not this was the intent, wearing revealing clothing always came across as a power play, and even sometimes as an act of aggression against other women who were wearing more reasonable attire. The effect of all of this was that the female friendships in these social circles were always on rocky ground.


It’s a fact of human nature that women are judged by their physical appearances more than men are, and therefore it’s easy for a feeling of competitiveness to arise in this area. When a girl would arrive at the office wearing a tight little outfit that commanded everyone’s attention, there was an unmistakable—though unspoken—feeling that a competition had been initiated. Even among the women who couldn’t care less about engaging in office beauty contests, who even pitied the scantily-clad girl for drawing the wrong type of attention to herself, there was a vague feeling of resentment that she had tried to initiate this “game” in the first place. All of these interactions remained below the surface, but they were very much present.


To describe how it felt to be a woman in that culture, imagine if men walked around displaying their annual incomes on nametags. To allow no-holds-barred competition in an area where men are particularly sensitive to judgment would inevitably poison their relationships with one another. And so it is with women.


Discussions about the benefits of modesty tend to focus on preserving the dignity of women and respecting men who are seeking chastity. Those are great points, but I think that the impact that it has on relationships among women is a huge benefit that is too often overlooked. The other day I saw a group of Catholic young adult women chatting after a meeting at church. They were about the same age as I was when I worked at that startup, and seeing them brought back memories of that time. In contrast to the culture I remembered, all of these girls looked beautiful and stylish while observing some basic ideas about modesty—and the effect was that there wasn’t that vibe that some of them were trying to be the center of attention with their dress, unlike back in my career days. It made me smile to see how well this system works. For women to embrace modesty is to declare a truce with one another. They can still aim to look nice, but mutual agreement on of reasonable standards of dress draws the boundary lines so that it doesn’t break out into a distracting competition.


Let me hasten to add that when I say that I’m now in social circles that value modesty, I don’t mean that we show up with pitchforks and torches at the house of any women who dare to wear skirts above the ankles, or that it’s something that is ever discussed at all (the occasional internet flare-up aside). I’m referring here to some basic ideas about how to dress that are so deeply embedded in this subculture that I doubt the average Catholic woman even realizes she’s doing anything different than women in some segments of society. As I’ve seen it practiced, embracing modesty isn’t about following a specific clothing checklist or mistaking fashion choices for holiness. Rather, it’s just a decision that women make, mostly in the back of their minds, not to make their bodies the center of everyone’s attention. It’s a small gesture, but the impact is striking. It brings an air of peace to a gathering of women that you just don’t have if a couple of gals have shown up in tiny tank tops and super-short shorts. It’s as if we simply say to one another, “I won’t show up in hotpants to your barbecue, you won’t wear a cleavage-bearing dress to my wine tasting, and we’ll all have a lovely time.”

August 5, 2011 With Blessed Father Alberione and With Father Tom

Friday, August 5
OF THE DAY
First Friday of the month—The Sacred Heart

Dt 4: 32-40
Mt 16: 24-28

Our first work is our sanctification. The apostolate is next.

This apostolate has to include looking for mew members. Prayer is not enough - we need the mortification of seeking . . . and not finding. This obligation binds every day all through our lives - the method we use is optional, the us of the method is not. The exam should always cover this point.

My thoughts from Blessed Father Alberione and the commentaries from Father Tom are missing from my little booklet for August 4- 8th, so I will post various interesting quotes from Blessed Alberione as I come across them until the thoughts in my monthly mailing start up again.

Please Pray for Our Deceased: All those in the Pauline Family, in our Parish families, who have most claim on our prayers, and all those who have no one to pray for them or are in most need.

Thursday, August 4, 2011

August 4, 2011 With Blessed Father Alberione and With Father Tom

Thursday, August 4
ST. JOHN MARY VIANNEY
First Thursday of the month—The Guardian Angels

Nm 20: 1-13
Mt 16: 13-23

Eternal beatitude is the complete satisfaction of all our powers: the vision of God, the possession of God, and happiness with God! Mind, will, heart! Heaven! Heaven! God alone can make us happy. (For Me To Live is Christ p. 19 #11)

My thoughts from Blessed Father Alberione and the commentaries from Father Tom are missing from my little booklet for August 4- 8th, so I will post various interesting quotes from Blessed Alberione as I come across them until the thoughts in my monthly mailing start up again.

Please Pray for Our Deceased: All those in the Pauline Family, in our Parish families, those who have most claim on our prayers, and all those who have no one to pray for them or are in most need.

Wednesday, August 3, 2011

Blessed Giaccardo August 2011

+ BLESSED


GIACCARDO



Our holy brother is now fully part of the Fr. Alberione's life and work but not exactly the part the Founder requires and so we find references to " disturbances" and "impatience" and, in general, the problem of a holy but human young clerical student when he has to deal with a true man of God, definitely inspired, but also very human.


November 18, 1917


A special sorrow for the disturbance in the press room and my impatience in class. As regards my spiritual struggle I believe I am intensifying it and am better understanding the spirit of humility. I feel myself small and contemptible and I can learn from the example and counsel of others who are better than me. (This is unlikely at the human level. He had several years of seminary studies and the others were mostly country youths from the area who were learning from him at least at the academic level).


/ am doing my best and am trying to use all the good directions contributing to my formation. I find myself in a period when the Spirit seems to be crushing me and so I badly need grace and prayer. I am sorry for my sloth and also for my mind-wandering during study time. But I await with passion the upcoming consecration to the Sacred Heart of Jesus in the Eucharist from which we will have the bond that unites the House and encourages all of us to holiness.


Then the big moment arrives and he writes joyfully.


O Jesus I am overjoyed today because I consecrated myself totally to you and now I am totally God's and completely committed to the House. Just a short time ago we made consecration to the Sacred Heart of Jesus and enthroned him in our House. Thank you, Jesus for this blessing. Now everything is yours: the material items in the House, our hearts and our minds which we will wear out working for the Good Press; our wills which will obey you; our bodies which we will keep pure. Jesus, our work is yours, you are our king and our lord, and you are this not only for each of us but for the entire House. Extend your kingdom, 0 Jesus.


Very edifying, but then do we detect a slightly different note?


Jesus, I am sorry and humbled because I have had a wild thought: I want to be a trusted companion and the successor of the Founder and the most attached to his spirit - but, how far I am from this!


Perhaps he didn't realize how far he actually was! The next entry is significant.


November 19, 1917


Dear Jesus, I have suffered, I have really suffered because I have failed to measure up to the expectations of the Founder. I deserve, Jesus, his lack of confidence in me and for this reason I humble myself and am glad to suffer.


Dear Jesus, I begin to write these lines while my heart is crushed and my soul also. Several times I have been afraid that I was the cause of disorders in the House. Today I got practical proof of it. This morning, dear Jesus, the Founder complained during the meditation that the House is slipping away from him although he is the only channel of God's inspirations. This came as a big shock to me and you know, O Jesus, that my Holy Communion was all about this meditation and my examination of myself'.


Dear Jesus, I find pride in myself: I notice that I like to let my class run over the appointed time ( he enjoyed sharing his intelligence); in discussions I insist on my point of view and do not always accept the Founder's decision; some things I do are really what the superior would do and I see myself as the superior - these feelings are sometimes merely passing but not always and, basically, in the depths of my soul I feel that I am almost equal to the Founder.


I have asked your forgiveness for all this, 0 Jesus and I have asked forgiveness also for having failed to train the young people in a spirit of attachment to the Founder. I then examined myself on the principles involved and I believe I have the right principles: unity in the House, total submission to the Founder as the only person who is inspired and can communicate your will to us.


Before I entered the House I told the Founder that I had this attitude and on his Feastday I said the same thing on behalf of all of us. That is why I made my vows and added the consecration of the House to the Sacred Heart. And so for my part I will try to limit myself to what he says and to imitate his examples and cultivate this submission in the others. Moreover, O Jesus, I prayed that I might not do enough for him because I am so soaked in the spirit of the Seminary. And I fear that he does not appreciate me enough.


Today, in a special way, the Founder said:


I thought you were better than you are and I had too much respect for you and wanted you to be my companion but I made a mistake.


You are full of a spirit of discipline but you have not yet filled yourself with the spirit of the House which has to be totally courage, joy and unity.


Perhaps without your being aware of it, your spirit has infected the others and now I feel that they are moving away from me and there are disorders. When you are out in the town you speak as if you were the superior - in fact Canon Chiesa (the Founder's Spiritual Director,), the Seminary Rector and even the Bishop have told me about this bad turn in your life.


I am the only superior and there must be no one between me and the young people. I must be the one to receive them and have them take their place in the House because I am the only one having God's inspirations. This must be the case at any cost, at ANY cost.


You have behaved as a superior and the young people have begun to see you as equal to me; your place is to be a humble disciple and nothing else: a humble disciple.


You can be superior only in class, in virtue and in humility.


Everyone must depend on me: this is essential if the will of God is to be done fully and this is how things will go better for you, for the House and for me.


Lord Jesus, I don't have sufficient tears to weep over these serious charges but you know my will and my sighs. What am I to do? I will abandon myself to you and be less and less sure of myself because my previous dispositions led me into sin.



(continued)

August 3, 2011 With Blessed Father Alberione and With Father Tom

Wednesday, August 3
OF THE DAY
First Wednesday of the month—St. Joseph

Nm 13: 1-35
Mt 15: 21-28

The difference between the teaching of Jesus Christ and secular teaching is not merely that the two are vastly different, but rather that Jesus gives the grace to follow his teaching (BM 315).

And, to repeat my of-repeated thought, the difference between simply sharing pious concepts and the real “apostolate” is given by the presence—or absence—of the Lord in the one doing the sharing.

Please Pray for Our Deceased: Sr. M. Stella Zappalorto FSP (1944)

Tuesday, August 2, 2011

August 2, 2011 With Blessed Father Alberione and With Father Tom

Tuesday, August 2
ST. EUSIBIUS OF VERCELLI, Bishop
St. Peter Julian Eymard, Priest
First Tuesday of the month—The Holy Souls in Purgatory

Nm 12: 1-13
Mt 15: 1-2, 10-14

Our happiness will be in proportion to how we live Jesus Christ (APD 40).

Or, to put it differently, we will try to THINK as the Master would think and reason in each circumstance, to SPEAK as He would speak in this or that situation, to ACT as He would act. This is the real “living in Christ,” or better, allowing Him to express Himself through my body and mind now as He expressed Himself in Palestine through His own body and mind.

Please Pray for Our Deceased: Sr. Rosaria Toschi SGBP (1999)—Sr. M. Agnes Kurihara FSP (2008)—Isabella Fais HFI (2008)—Sr. M. James Tharappel PD (2020)—Sr. M. Teresia Gastaldo PD (2010)—Mary Veig (1972)

Monday, August 1, 2011

August 1, 2011 With Blessed Father Alberione and With Father Tom





Monday, August 1
ST. ALPHONSUS LIGUORI, Bishop, Doctor
First Monday of the month—St. Paul

Nm 11: 4-15
Mt 14: 22-26

MONTHLY INTENTION

To know and make know that only Jesus, the incarnate Word, is the perfect Master, the sure Way that leads to knowing the Father and to participating in His life.

Surely the key phrase here is “to KNOW and make known.” It is not difficult to make Jesus known, to “share the (human) word.” But if the “sharer” does not KNOW the Master, has not met Him in prayer and does not possess…what is he/she sharing?

Please Pray for Our Deceased: Sr. M. Antonietta Marello PD (1958)—Sr. Alessandrina Mirto PD (1976)—Sr. M. Giacoma Collotto PD (1981)—Br. Giangranco Patella SSP (1984)—Sr. M. Timotea Alasia PSP (2002)—Nunzia Riccobene IAM (2002)—Marina Alvarado de Gonzalez HFI (2004)—Fr. Paolo Saorin SSP