Tribulation Times
FROM THE EDITOR: UNDER THE WEATHER (STREP THROAT). WILL PROBABLY NOT POST AGAIN UNTIL NEXT WEEK.
(Rev 3:15-16) "'I know your works: you are neither cold nor hot. Would that you were cold or hot! So, because you are lukewarm, and neither cold nor hot, I will spew you out of my mouth.
APOSTASY IN THE HEADLINES
A different kind of hunger
Words associated with Christianity and British history taken out of children's dictionary
New bishop won't alienate pro-choice politicians
COMMENTARY: Individual Bishops Are NOT Above Canon Law
POPE BENEDICT XVI: Liberalism Needs to Rediscover God, Says Pope
FROM THE MAILBAG
VIA FR. HECTOR R.G. PEREZ: Lately I have heard of a local ongoing debate, which I fear is probably pretty much universal, regarding the Season of Advent. The debate focuses on whether Advent is just a time of preparation for Christmas, could we then call it a pre-Christmas, or a penitential season. The Church's answer, as usual, stands in the middle - "Virtus in medio stat." While it is a time for preparation for the great Feast of the Nativity of the Son of God made Man - and as such what a wonderful event that is - it is also a penitential season, that is, a time of penance and sacrifice. When we were little, those of us who were fortunate enough to have had good old fashioned sisters as our teachers in grade school, were told to make many acts of penance and self-abnegation, sacrifices, special devotions and to have a crib for the Baby Jesus in which we would put a piece of straw for each act we performed. The idea was that we would have so many acts of penance that we would make a comfy bed for the Baby Jesus. It was childlike, yes, and simple. But isn't Christmas all about childlikeness and simplicity? The idea was that according to age-old Church practice Advent was - and is - a season of penance. That is very difficult in the post-Christian and secularized world in which most of us live. Christmas carols and decorations spring up as early as Halloween (yes) in many places and for the most part after Thanksgiving. Those same decorations are thrown out and the carols cease the day after Christmas. We as Catholics should be counter cultural - as Pope John Paul II often reminded us. Christmas lasts for forty days until Candle on February 2nd - which goes back to the Law of Moses which Christ came to fulfill to perfection. The Vatican is a good sign of this since by order of the Pope the ancient Roman practice of leaving up all Nativity scenes (even in St. Peter's Square) until Feb. 2nd has been both kept up and restored in the last few years (as far as St. Peter's is concerned). Thus we have Forty Days of Christmas. It is then that we should have Christmas parties and feasts, not before Christmas Eve. In too many quarters, too many Parishes, and Catholic organizations we have succumbed to the ways of the world. Instead of bringing the light of the Truth to the world we have molded ourselves about its erroneous criteria. This must change.
On the other hand we have this time of Advent. It is a Season of Penance for which the Church vests Herself in violet or purple (except Gaudete Sunday in Rose which signifies a lessening of the rigors of penance). So it is a Penitential Season, primarily. Yes, it is a time of preparation for the Birth of Christ, just as Lent is a time of preparation for Easter. Does that mean we start to celebrate Christmas before Christmas and forget the penance which our Faith and Tradition tell us we must do? Does that mean we start to celebrate Easter on Ash Wednesday and forget our Lenten penance? I think we all know the answer. The Liturgy and Discipline of the Church (which follows the Liturgy) tell us otherwise. We prepare for Christmas - or for Easter - by repentance, by penances, sacrifices, increased quality and time and number of prayers and devotions. We gather, as it were, many pieces of straw to make His crib more comfortable. So yes, this is a time to performs acts of fasting and abstinence. Of giving witness - "No I cannot partake of that because I am preparing for Christmas which starts, not ends, on Christmas Day." It is a time of renewed repentance. A time to make a good Confession of our sins. Needless to say, we repeat with John Paul II, the desire and advice to all that they should go to Confession regularly, at least once a month. The just man sins seven times a day. Once or twice a year is hardly sufficient to make a good thorough confession or to partake in the elements of spiritual growth which this wonderful Sacrament affords us. It is a time when we should try to attend and participate in the Sacred Mysteries of the Mass and perhaps in at least the readings of the Divine Office, the Liturgy of the Hours which are so very beautiful. A time to meditate more deeply in the Joyful Mysteries of the Rosary with Her who was so essentially central to their taking place and their remembrance by the Evangelists and the early Church. With St. John the Baptist who plays a central role in this Season we also must yell from the rooftops: "Repent! The Kingdom of God is at hand!" "Make straight the ways of the Lord!" Fill in the valleys and bring down the mountains of our sins so the Lord's coming will be easy and fruitful for us. Repent! Prepare! Rejoice, because our salvation is close at hand!
Prayer request? Send an email to: PrayerRequest3@aol.com
READ THE BIBLE IN ONE YEAR: http://www.oneyearbibleonline.com/december.asp?version=63&startmmdd=0101
December 10, 2008FROM THE EDITOR: UNDER THE WEATHER (STREP THROAT). WILL PROBABLY NOT POST AGAIN UNTIL NEXT WEEK.
(Rev 3:15-16) "'I know your works: you are neither cold nor hot. Would that you were cold or hot! So, because you are lukewarm, and neither cold nor hot, I will spew you out of my mouth.
APOSTASY IN THE HEADLINES
A different kind of hunger
Words associated with Christianity and British history taken out of children's dictionary
New bishop won't alienate pro-choice politicians
COMMENTARY: Individual Bishops Are NOT Above Canon Law
POPE BENEDICT XVI: Liberalism Needs to Rediscover God, Says Pope
FROM THE MAILBAG
VIA FR. HECTOR R.G. PEREZ: Lately I have heard of a local ongoing debate, which I fear is probably pretty much universal, regarding the Season of Advent. The debate focuses on whether Advent is just a time of preparation for Christmas, could we then call it a pre-Christmas, or a penitential season. The Church's answer, as usual, stands in the middle - "Virtus in medio stat." While it is a time for preparation for the great Feast of the Nativity of the Son of God made Man - and as such what a wonderful event that is - it is also a penitential season, that is, a time of penance and sacrifice. When we were little, those of us who were fortunate enough to have had good old fashioned sisters as our teachers in grade school, were told to make many acts of penance and self-abnegation, sacrifices, special devotions and to have a crib for the Baby Jesus in which we would put a piece of straw for each act we performed. The idea was that we would have so many acts of penance that we would make a comfy bed for the Baby Jesus. It was childlike, yes, and simple. But isn't Christmas all about childlikeness and simplicity? The idea was that according to age-old Church practice Advent was - and is - a season of penance. That is very difficult in the post-Christian and secularized world in which most of us live. Christmas carols and decorations spring up as early as Halloween (yes) in many places and for the most part after Thanksgiving. Those same decorations are thrown out and the carols cease the day after Christmas. We as Catholics should be counter cultural - as Pope John Paul II often reminded us. Christmas lasts for forty days until Candle on February 2nd - which goes back to the Law of Moses which Christ came to fulfill to perfection. The Vatican is a good sign of this since by order of the Pope the ancient Roman practice of leaving up all Nativity scenes (even in St. Peter's Square) until Feb. 2nd has been both kept up and restored in the last few years (as far as St. Peter's is concerned). Thus we have Forty Days of Christmas. It is then that we should have Christmas parties and feasts, not before Christmas Eve. In too many quarters, too many Parishes, and Catholic organizations we have succumbed to the ways of the world. Instead of bringing the light of the Truth to the world we have molded ourselves about its erroneous criteria. This must change.
On the other hand we have this time of Advent. It is a Season of Penance for which the Church vests Herself in violet or purple (except Gaudete Sunday in Rose which signifies a lessening of the rigors of penance). So it is a Penitential Season, primarily. Yes, it is a time of preparation for the Birth of Christ, just as Lent is a time of preparation for Easter. Does that mean we start to celebrate Christmas before Christmas and forget the penance which our Faith and Tradition tell us we must do? Does that mean we start to celebrate Easter on Ash Wednesday and forget our Lenten penance? I think we all know the answer. The Liturgy and Discipline of the Church (which follows the Liturgy) tell us otherwise. We prepare for Christmas - or for Easter - by repentance, by penances, sacrifices, increased quality and time and number of prayers and devotions. We gather, as it were, many pieces of straw to make His crib more comfortable. So yes, this is a time to performs acts of fasting and abstinence. Of giving witness - "No I cannot partake of that because I am preparing for Christmas which starts, not ends, on Christmas Day." It is a time of renewed repentance. A time to make a good Confession of our sins. Needless to say, we repeat with John Paul II, the desire and advice to all that they should go to Confession regularly, at least once a month. The just man sins seven times a day. Once or twice a year is hardly sufficient to make a good thorough confession or to partake in the elements of spiritual growth which this wonderful Sacrament affords us. It is a time when we should try to attend and participate in the Sacred Mysteries of the Mass and perhaps in at least the readings of the Divine Office, the Liturgy of the Hours which are so very beautiful. A time to meditate more deeply in the Joyful Mysteries of the Rosary with Her who was so essentially central to their taking place and their remembrance by the Evangelists and the early Church. With St. John the Baptist who plays a central role in this Season we also must yell from the rooftops: "Repent! The Kingdom of God is at hand!" "Make straight the ways of the Lord!" Fill in the valleys and bring down the mountains of our sins so the Lord's coming will be easy and fruitful for us. Repent! Prepare! Rejoice, because our salvation is close at hand!
Ladder of Divine Ascent excerpt: Step 12- "On lying"
8. We notice various degrees of harm in all the passions, and this is certainly the case with lying. There is one judgment for him who lies through fear of punishment, and another for him who lies when no danger is at hand.Prayer request? Send an email to: PrayerRequest3@aol.com
This month's archive can be found at: http://www.catholicprophecy.info/news2.html.
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