Tuesday, February 21, 2012

Preparing our hearts for Lent


Today is Fat Tuesday, Shrove Tuesday, Mardi Gras...whatever you like to call it.  It is the last day of feasting and celebration before we turn our hearts to a much more solemn and sorrowful season of the Catholic liturgical year.  Lent is a time to prepare our hearts for Easter.  We must come to the foot of the cross, repenting of our sins and truly grasping our need for a Savior.  It is at the foot of the cross that we can bring all of our troubles and sins and be met with mercy and love.  For our God is loving and He is merciful!  He wants nothing more than for us to bring Him all of our struggles and He will give us the strength we need.  It is in Christ's presence that our peace is restored and we feel strengthened.  He is the source of our goodness.

St. Augustine (in his book, Confessions) said it so well and it is quoted in the Catechism:

"You are great, O Lord, and greatly to be praised; great is your power and your wisdom is without measure. And man, so small a part of your creation, wants to praise you: this man, though clothed with mortality and bearing the evidence of sin and the proof that you withstand the proud. Despite everything, man, though but a small a part of your creation, wants to praise you. You yourself encourage him to delight in your praise, for you have made us for yourself, and heart is restless until it rests in you." (CCC 30)

Our hearts are restless until they rest in Him.  Lent is a time when we bring all of ours sins before God.  We must acknowledge those sins, receive the healing grace of the Sacrament of Reconciliation and then begin to prepare for our renewal of our baptismal promises at Easter.   So what are you going to do for Lent to draw closer to Christ?

Our family this year has much planned.  The boys are finally at the age where they can really participate and begin to understand what we are doing.  I started by setting goals and making a poster board with our goals.  I got the awesome idea from Shower of Roses and Family at the Foot of the Cross.  I took their ideas and made our own!  Here is what we came up with:



We have set goals for Prayer, Fasting and Almsgiving that the boys can do.  I have also listed seven scripture verses that the boys will memorize one per week.  I will sit down today and fill out the post-it notes, which will get replaced with purple ones.  The flowers on those are far too cheery for Lent.  On each post-it note will be something that the boys have to go around the house and count how many of that item and then we will put the corresponding number of pennies into a bowl. At the end of Lent, those pennies will be a donation from the boys to the poor people.  Underneath the post-it note will be some good deed, prayer or act of giving that they will perform for the day.  Whew...it will be a busy Lent, but hopefully one that we can all grow closer to Christ!  We will be doing crafts from the Lent-Easter Book which is amazing!  Every family should have this book!

One of the biggest sacrifices my boys are going to make is no TV except for Religious videos.   Poor little guys have no idea that Lent is 47 days; they will surely be missing Curious George and Cat in the Hat by Easter, or will they?  My hope is that they detach themselves from it and most likely, they will adjust better than I will.  This is more of a sacrifice for me, since that is my free time each day.  It will be good for us all; TV is a luxury that we should do without.

As for me, I have 5 bible studies that I am doing, 2 of which will end about the time Easter comes around.  I am going to replace much of my free time with studying and preparing for those bible studies, but also doing some additional reading.  The first book I want to get through is True Devotion to Mary by St. Louis De Montfort.  This book is heavy theology, so I have to read it two or three times before I somewhat understand a paragraph.  At the end of the book, you make a total consecration to Mary and I am finally ready to prepare myself for this!  I hope to do this by Easter.  I will also be doing this study: Come and See Catholic Bible Study: The Synoptics while reading the text of Life of Christ by Fulton J. Sheen that correlates with it.  There is so much more that I want to do and read, but I think this will keep me more than busy.  Hope I still have time to clean the house! ;-)

I have never done much fasting, but since I am not pregnant or breastfeeding for the first time in 5 years, this would be the perfect time.  I am abstaining from soda through Lent and will fast on Wednesdays and Fridays throughout Lent...not true fasting of only bread and water, but rather only one meal for the day, no snacking and the other two meals combined cannot add up to the one regular meal for the day.  This fasting will be a good reminder of my need for God and not to cling to the things of this world!

My prayer for our family and friends is that this Lent proves to be a time that you are able to draw closer to Christ, meditate on the sacrifice on the Cross and find peace in Him!


Wednesday, January 25, 2012

Prayer Warriors

Prayer Warriors?  Certainly not me, I am a stay at home mom with three small children.  How could I possibly have the time or energy?  How wrong I was to ever think that!!!  As a mother, I have the opportunity and calling to be a prayer warrior and here is why:

I was listening to Catholic Radio a little over a month ago and they were discussing the decline in religious orders.  In our current American culture, very few young men and women discern and choose to live a life of chastity as a monk, priest or nun.  The numbers have declined dramatically in the last 30 years.


According to official church statistics, from 1978 to 2005 the number of religious priests worldwide declined from 158,000 to 137,000, while religious brothers decreased from about 75,000 to 55,000. The sharpest drop was in the number of women religious, which went from 985,000 to 783,000.

The situation is clearly going to get worse in coming years, mainly because of the aging population of the largest religious orders.

There are other problems, too, including the increasing defection rate of new entrants; in many places, 40 percent to 60 percent of those entering religious order formation programs leave before making their final commitment.

Father Lewandowski said his own Crosier order has projected that its membership will decline by half over the next 10 years.

http://www.catholicnews.com/data/stories/cns/0801033.htm


These numbers are concerning.  It caused me to wonder, what is the role of these religious?  They are called to be witnesses to Christ.  By living a life of simplicity, often times poverty, they are a witness to the rest of us, how we are to submit to God's will and live for Him and the good of others.  Our own personal will must decrease, so that God may increase within us.  Wow.....what a difficult thing to do.

How have these religious affected our society?  We have an education system today because of the monks.  We have hospitals and modern day medicine because of the nuns who began healthcare at a time when Government had no desire to help the poor.  Many of the nuns were trained as nurses and started hospitals in Europe and in this country.  Today, about 30% of hospitals are still Catholic.

One of the most important roles that these religious have is their prayers.  Often times, we underestimate the power of prayer.  However, we all believe that God answers prayers, so why are we not praying without ceasing as St. Paul encouraged us to do?? (1 Thessalonians 5:17)   If you look at the Rules of Life for any of these Religious Orders, many hours a day is spent in prayer, meditation, reading Scripture and spending time with God.  It made me wonder why we as the lay members of the church do not orient our days in the same manner?  Most obvious answer, because of our sinfulness.  As a stay at home mother, the other reason is lack of time.  But is there a way that I could be a prayer warrior and in some small way, make up for the lack of religious?

Of course we as stay at home moms can be prayer warriors!  I pray without ceasing throughout the day, but often my prayers are random and apply to whatever the current situation is.  It made me wonder if my prayers and days would have more purpose if there was a daily theme to them.  So, I have sat down and constructed a prayer "theme" for each day.  Every day, I focus my prayers on these intentions and it is nice to have a specific intention throughout the day, in addition to my own personal requests.  So, here is our family schedule:

Monday - Abortion
Tuesday - World Hunger
Wednesday - Pope, priests and other religious
Thursday - American Leadership
Friday - Conversion of Souls to Christ
Saturday - World Peace
Sunday - Domestic Church

This is our schedule for now.  Even small children can be encouraged to pray for these causes throughout the day.  For the first time, I fasted yesterday for the cause of World Hunger.  It was humbling to physically feel hungry and remember what so many people throughout the world go through on a daily basis.  If done properly and with the right spirit, we are able to unite ourselves with Christ, His suffering and the sufferings of those throughout the world.

Our society tells us that as stay at home moms, our role and purpose is minimal.  A career is much more rewarding than raising children to do God's will and strengthen the Domestic Church.  The Catholic Church couldn't disagree more.  As mothers, we have the opportunity to increase our prayer life for the good of others.  While we cannot make up for the declining religious orders, we can offer our prayers daily while we wait for vocations to increase.

And while you're praying, make sure you encourage your children to someday seek a life of commitment to God as a priest, nun or monk!!!!  Those religious orders will only increase in numbers if we as parents, encourage our children to discern if God is calling them to that vocation!



Friday, January 6, 2012

Epiphany - May we never go back!



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Today is the celebration of Epiphany!  Many Christians do not celebrate this liturgical holiday but most everyone knows the story of the three kings who came to visit baby Jesus.  There are many beautiful insights written about the Three Kings, who they were and how they found baby Jesus.  Perhaps the most beautiful insight about these men, has come from the late Rev. Fulton Sheen.  The story of the Visit of the Magi that can be found in chapter 2 of the gospel of Matthew.

The Three Wise Men arrived in Jerusalem searching for the Christ child.  They were gentiles; scientists who came to pay homage to the King.  When Herod heard of their inquiry, he immediately asked that they return to tell him where to find the Christ so that he too could pay homage.  The 3 Kings brought 3 gifts, gold to honor His Kingship, frankincense to honor His Divinity and myrrh to honor His Humanity.  Myrrh was also used at His burial.

After paying homage, God warned the Three Wise Men not to return to Jerusalem but instead go home by another way.  It is in this Scripture passage (Matthew 2:12) that Fulton Sheen has immense insight.  He says "No one who ever meets Christ with a good will returns the same way he came."

Of course the Wise Men went home a different way.  What does this mean for us?  It means that when we approach Christ, the Divine Life, we must allow a conversion within our hearts, such that we do not go back to our old sinful ways.  We must allow His presence and His love to change us, to conform us to His Will.  In doing so, we take a different path with our lives.  It is our response to His grace and love that allows God's will to become our own.  These conversions can happen daily, if we allow it.  As Catholics, we don't believe that there was one conversion that has achieved us Salvation.  Though you may experience a great conversion that forever changes you, we all experience many conversions throughout our lives that help us to become more Christ-like.  It is our response to His love that allows us to change the path of our life; resisting the temptation to return to our sinful habits.

This is why a strong prayer life is so critical.  We must humbly approach God each day through his Word, through daily Scripture reading.  When we read Scripture, our hearts and minds are hearing the Truth.  Reflection on these holy words allow us to incorporate these Truths into our daily lives.  We must listen with an open heart, one that is willing to hear things we may not want to hear, but we know that it is Truth.  We must then take these Truths that God reveals to us, examine our own life and then commit to change our own actions.

I strongly encourage you to pick up a copy of "Life of Christ" by Fulton J. Sheen.  Fulton Sheen was the bishop of Rochester and lived from 1895 to 1979.  He was a great man of immense faith and wisdom who is without a doubt, a Saint.  His canonization by the Church is under consideration.