Archive for the tag 'Pope Benedict XVI'

An Invisible Monastery to Pray for Vocations

April 21st, 2013

Have you ever heard of the Invisible Monastery?  Well, until a month ago I hadn’t either.  On this 50th World Day of Prayer for Vocations I thought it a wonderful occasion to tell you about it.

Several weeks ago I received a letter in the mail with a very interesting return address. The sender was “Invisible Monastery”.  I was delighted to see it is an endeavor to promote continuous prayer for an increase of priestly and religious vocations founded by our good friend at Vianney Vocations.

I hope you will visit the Invisible Monastery and pledge to pray for vocations. When I registered last week there were less than 5 other persons who had registered in the Diocese of Owensboro.  We need more registrants!

Here is a link to today’s message for the World Day of Prayer for Vocations by Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI.  A very inspiring meditation written before his retirement.

I dislike writing blog posts without photos – enjoy these photos taken yesterday!

Christiesgardenblog

Christie’s precious little garden beside shed

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Christie with her great gardening apron and shovel in hand!

fencerepairblog

Fence repair – fence needed to keep out the deer. Wood and blocks needed to keep out the rabbits and mice. Did you know mice like broccoli leaves?

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Sr. Cecilia Maria has big plans for this flower bed.

birdhouseblog

Last year when we opened the door of this bird house we discovered it was instead an ant house!

Living and Sharing Our Life of Prayer

March 7th, 2013

Last week brought us the largest Nun Run we have ever welcomed to the monastery. About 40 high school gals came all the way from St. Mary of the Woods parish in Whitesville, KY – about 3 minutes from our monastery. They arrived in a large charter bus!  I should have gotten a picture of that.

  StMaryNunRun2013blog

It was a joy to share with them the riches and treasure of Passionist life, of being a bride of Christ and living as love in the Heart of the Church.

StMaryNunRunChaps2013

Here we are with the chaperones. Fr. Ken Geraci, CPM, spearheaded this group. Way to go Fr. Geraci!  I have to take this opportunity to put in a good word for our dear Fathers of Mercy. Fr. Geraci was just ordained a priest with this community last summer. He is currently assigned as Associate Pastor at St. Mary of the Woods. After leaving our monastery the group headed off to visit the Dominican Sisters of St. Cecilia in Nashville, TN – about 2 hour drive from here.

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Another newsworthy item of last week was of course the resignation of our beloved Papa Pope Benedict XVI. As the Nun Run was departing it was 8 p.m. Rome time and official moment of resignation. We joined with the Universal Church in praying for our beloved Pontiff Emeritus and are praying for the Cardinals as they gather for the conclave.

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Pope Benedict giving his blessing to our newly elected Superior General Fr. Joachim Rego, CP, October 5, 2012

We came across the following article last week on EWTN News.  We are looking forward to receiving this letter!

Cardinal Bertone, Vatican Secretary of State, has written to the world’s nuns and monks to ask for their prayers for the conclave to elect Pope Benedict’s successor

“The Holy Father is certain that you, in your monasteries and convents throughout the world, will provide the precious resource of that prayerful faith which down the centuries has accompanied and sustained the Church along her pilgrim path,” Cardinal Tarcisio Bertone’s Feb. 21 letter says.

“The coming conclave,” Cardinal Bertone emphasizes, “will thus depend in a special way on the transparent purity of your prayer and worship.”

He noted that Pope Benedict “has asked all the faithful to accompany him with their prayers … and to await with trust the arrival of the new Pope.”

“In a particularly urgent way,” he added, “this appeal is addressed to those chosen members of the Church who are contemplatives.” And Cardinal Bertone advised contemplatives to look to the Pope’s example of devoting “himself above all to prayer, contemplation and reflection.”

The Secretary of State finished his letter by saying that Pope Benedict, “with whom I shared the contents of this letter, was deeply appreciative, and asked me to thank you and to assure you of his immense love and esteem.”

Pope’s Message to Religious: Seek the Face of God

February 7th, 2013

Ignore ‘prophets of doom’ predicting end of religious life, pope says…

that’s the catchy title at Catholic News Service where I picked up this article.
 
I tried to find the full text of the Pope’s Message given February 2nd celebrating the World Day for Consecrated Life but could not find it published in English.  How blessed our community was to have a First Profession of Vows on this day!
 
UPDATE: Special thanks to my friend at Lisieux Musings for finding the English translation of Pope Benedict’s Homily here.

By Cindy Wooden
Catholic News Service

VATICAN CITY (CNS) — Pope Benedict XVI asked nuns, brothers and priests not to listen to the “prophets of doom” who say that consecrated life has no future or that it has no meaning in today’s world.

“Do not join the prophets of doom who proclaim the end or the lack of meaning of consecrated life in today’s church; rather clothe yourselves with Jesus Christ and put on the armor of light … remaining awake and vigilant,” Pope Benedict told consecrated virgins and men and women who belong to religious orders.

Pope Benedict XVI celebrated Mass with the religious Feb. 2, marking the feast of the Presentation of the Lord and the World Day for Consecrated Life.

In a darkened St. Peter’s Basilica, 50 superiors of men’s and women’s orders carried lighted candles and processed into the church before Pope Benedict, who rode in on a mobile platform carrying his own candle.

The special Mass also marked the Year of Faith. In previous years, Pope Benedict observed the feast day either by leading evening prayer with the religious or joining them after a Mass celebrated by the prefect of the Congregation for Institutes of Consecrated Life and Societies of Apostolic Life.

With thousands of consecrated men and women filling St. Peter’s Basilica, the pope said he wanted to ask three things of the world’s religious during the Year of Faith.

First, he said, they should meditate on that “‘first love’ with which the Lord Jesus Christ warmed your hearts, not to be nostalgic, but to fan that flame.”

“To do this, you must spend time with him, in the silence of adoration, and then you will reawaken the desire and the joy of sharing his life, his choices, his obedience of faith” and “the radical nature of his love,” the pope said.

The pope also asked the religious to recognize “the wisdom of weakness,” modeling themselves after Christ who emptied himself completely out of love for God and God’s creation. “In the joys and afflictions of the present time, when the difficulty and weight of the cross make themselves felt,” he said, recognize that “precisely in our limits and human weakness we are called to live in conformity with Christ.”

In modern cultures that value efficiency and success, he said, the humility and poverty of religious life are “Gospel signs of contradiction” and ensure that religious can empathize with and become a voice for the voiceless.

Pope Benedict’s third call to religious was to “renew the faith that makes you pilgrims moving toward the future.”

Rather than listening to those who think that giving everything to Christ is meaningless or who see the declining numbers of religious as a sign that consecrated life will disappear completely, he said, religious must live their lives seeking the face of God.

“Let this be the constant yearning of your hearts, the fundamental criterion that guides your journey, both in your little daily steps as well as in important decisions,” he said.

END

 

World Day of Prayer for Vocations 2012

April 26th, 2012

The 49th World Day of Prayer for Vocations will be observed this Sunday, April 29th, which is also known as “Good Shepherd Sunday.”  The purpose of this day is to publicly fulfill the Lord’s instruction to, “Pray the Lord of the harvest to send laborers into his harvest” (Mt 9:38; Lk 10:2).

Please pray that young men and women hear and respond generously to the Lord’s call to the priesthood, diaconate, religious life, societies of apostolic life or secular institutes. You can find many resources to promote a culture of vocations on the USCCB Facebook page for vocations.

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We have some super great news on the vocation front:

Please keep up your prayers for aspirant Anne. She was recently accepted to enter the postulancy. She is home now tying up loose ends and please God, will enter the monastery on Saturday, May 19th!

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Below is Pope Benedict’s Message for the
49th World Day of Prayer for Vocations:

Theme: Vocations, the Gift of the Love of God

Dear Brothers and Sisters,

The 49th World Day of Prayer for Vocations, which will be celebrated on 29 April 2012, the Fourth Sunday of Easter, prompts us to meditate on the theme: Vocations, the Gift of the Love of God.

The source of every perfect gift is God who is Love – Deus caritas est: “Whoever remains in love remains in God and God in him” (1 Jn 4:16). Sacred Scripture tells the story of this original bond between God and man, which precedes creation itself. Writing to the Christians of the city of Ephesus, Saint Paul raises a hymn of gratitude and praise to the Father who, with infinite benevolence, in the course of the centuries accomplishes his universal plan of salvation, which is a plan of love. In his Son Jesus – Paul states – “he chose us, before the foundation of the world, to be holy and without blemish before him in love” (Eph 1:4). We are loved by God even “before” we come into existence! Moved solely by his unconditional love, he created us “not … out of existing things” (cf. 2 Macc 7:28), to bring us into full communion with Him.

In great wonderment before the work of God’s providence, the Psalmist exclaims: “When I see the heavens, the work of your hands, the moon and the stars which you arranged, what is man that you should keep him in mind, mortal man that you care for him?” (Ps 8:3-4). The profound truth of our existence is thus contained in this surprising mystery: every creature, and in particular every human person, is the fruit of God’s thought and an act of his love, a love that is boundless, faithful and everlasting (cf. Jer 31:3). The discovery of this reality is what truly and profoundly changes our lives.

In a famous page of the Confessions, Saint Augustine expresses with great force his discovery of God, supreme beauty and supreme love, a God who was always close to him, and to whom he at last opened his mind and heart to be transformed:

“Late have I loved you, O Beauty ever ancient, ever new, late have I loved you! You were within me, but I was outside, and it was there that I searched for you. In my unloveliness I plunged into the lovely things which you created. You were with me, but I was not with you. Created things kept me from you; yet if they had not been in you they would have not been at all. You called, you shouted, and you broke through my deafness. You flashed, you shone, and you dispelled my blindness. You breathed your fragrance on me; I drew in breath and now I pant for you. I have tasted you, now I hunger and thirst for more. You touched me, and I burned for your peace.”

(X, 27.38)

With these images, the Saint of Hippo seeks to describe the ineffable mystery of his encounter with God, with God’s love that transforms all of life.

It is a love that is limitless and that precedes us, sustains us and calls us along the path of life, a love rooted in an absolutely free gift of God. Speaking particularly of the ministerial priesthood, my predecessor, Blessed John Paul II, stated that “every ministerial action – while it leads to loving and serving the Church – provides an incentive to grow in ever greater love and service of Jesus Christ the head, shepherd and spouse of the Church, a love which is always a response to the free and unsolicited love of God in Christ” (Pastores Dabo Vobis, 25). Every specific vocation is in fact born of the initiative of God; it is a gift of the Love of God! He is the One who takes the “first step”, and not because he has found something good in us, but because of the presence of his own love “poured out into our hearts through the Holy Spirit” (Rom 5:5).

In every age, the source of the divine call is to be found in the initiative of the infinite love of God, who reveals himself fully in Jesus Christ. As I wrote in my first Encyclical, Deus Caritas Est,

“God is indeed visible in a number of ways. In the love-story recounted by the Bible, he comes towards us, he seeks to win our hearts, all the way to the Last Supper, to the piercing of his heart on the Cross, to his appearances after the Resurrection and to the great deeds by which, through the activity of the Apostles, he guided the nascent Church along its path. Nor has the Lord been absent from subsequent Church history: he encounters us ever anew, in the men and women who reflect his presence, in his word, in the sacraments, and especially in the Eucharist”

(No. 17)

The love of God is everlasting; he is faithful to himself, to the “word that he commanded for a thousand generations” (Ps 105:8). Yet the appealing beauty of this divine love, which precedes and accompanies us, needs to be proclaimed ever anew, especially to younger generations. This divine love is the hidden impulse, the motivation which never fails, even in the most difficult circumstances.

Dear brothers and sisters, we need to open our lives to this love. It is to the perfection of the Father’s love (cf. Mt 5:48) that Jesus Christ calls us every day! The high standard of the Christian life consists in loving “as” God loves; with a love that is shown in the total, faithful and fruitful gift of self. Saint John of the Cross, writing to the Prioress of the Monastery of Segovia who was pained by the terrible circumstances surrounding his suspension, responded by urging her to act as God does: “Think nothing else but that God ordains all, and where there is no love, put love, and there you will draw out love” (Letters, 26).

It is in this soil of self-offering and openness to the love of God, and as the fruit of that love, that all vocations are born and grow. By drawing from this wellspring through prayer, constant recourse to God’s word and to the sacraments, especially the Eucharist, it becomes possible to live a life of love for our neighbors, in whom we come to perceive the face of Christ the Lord (cf. Mt 25:31-46). To express the inseparable bond that links these “two loves” – love of God and love of neighbor – both of which flow from the same divine source and return to it, Pope Saint Gregory the Great uses the metaphor of the seedling: “In the soil of our heart God first planted the root of love for him; from this, like the leaf, sprouts love for one another.” (Moralium Libri, sive expositio in Librum B. Job, Lib. VII, Ch. 24, 28; PL 75, 780D).

These two expressions of the one divine love must be lived with a particular intensity and purity of heart by those who have decided to set out on the path of vocation discernment towards the ministerial priesthood and the consecrated life; they are its distinguishing mark. Love of God, which priests and consecrated persons are called to mirror, however imperfectly, is the motivation for answering the Lord’s call to special consecration through priestly ordination or the profession of the evangelical counsels. Saint Peter’s vehement reply to the Divine Master: “Yes, Lord, you know that I love you” (Jn 21:15) contains the secret of a life fully given and lived out, and thus one which is deeply joyful.

The other practical expression of love, that towards our neighbor, and especially those who suffer and are in greatest need, is the decisive impulse that leads the priest and the consecrated person to be a builder of communion between people and a sower of hope. The relationship of consecrated persons, and especially of the priest, to the Christian community is vital and becomes a fundamental dimension of their affectivity. The Curé of Ars was fond of saying: “Priests are not priests for themselves, but for you” (Le cure d’Ars. Sa penséeSon cœur, Foi Vivante, 1966, p. 100).

Dear brother bishops, dear priests, deacons, consecrated men and women, catechists, pastoral workers and all of you who are engaged in the field of educating young people: I fervently exhort you to pay close attention to those members of parish communities, associations and ecclesial movements who sense a call to the priesthood or to a special consecration. It is important for the Church to create the conditions that will permit many young people to say “yes” in generous response to God’s loving call.

The task of fostering vocations will be to provide helpful guidance and direction along the way. Central to this should be love of God’s word nourished by a growing familiarity with sacred Scripture, and attentive and unceasing prayer, both personal and in community; this will make it possible to hear God’s call amid all the voices of daily life. But above all, the Eucharist should be the heart of every vocational journey: it is here that the love of God touches us in Christ’s sacrifice, the perfect expression of love, and it is here that we learn ever anew how to live according to the “high standard” of God’s love. Scripture, prayer and the Eucharist are the precious treasure enabling us to grasp the beauty of a life spent fully in service of the Kingdom.

It is my hope that the local Churches and all the various groups within them, will become places where vocations are carefully discerned and their authenticity tested, places where young men and women are offered wise and strong spiritual direction. In this way, the Christian community itself becomes a manifestation of the Love of God in which every calling is contained.

As a response to the demands of the new commandment of Jesus, this can find eloquent and particular realization in Christian families, whose love is an expression of the love of Christ who gave himself for his Church (cf. Eph 5:32). Within the family, “a community of life and love” (Gaudium et Spes, 48), young people can have a wonderful experience of this self-giving love. Indeed, families are not only the privileged place for human and Christian formation; they can also be “the primary and most excellent seed-bed of vocations to a life of consecration to the Kingdom of God” (Familiaris Consortio, 53), by helping their members to see, precisely within the family, the beauty and the importance of the priesthood and the consecrated life. May pastors and all the lay faithful always cooperate so that in the Church these “homes and schools of communion” may multiply, modelled on the Holy Family of Nazareth, the harmonious reflection on earth of the life of the Most Holy Trinity.

With this prayerful hope, I cordially impart my Apostolic Blessing to all of you: my brother bishops, priests, deacons, religious men and women and all lay faithful, and especially those young men and women who strive to listen with a docile heart to God’s voice and are ready to respond generously and faithfully.

 From the Vatican, 18 October 2011

BENEDICTUS PP. XVI

Cultivating a Sense of Humor

April 23rd, 2012

Three blog posts in 3 days! I am on a roll…or actually, I am on retreat and have time to type up some posts that have been rolling around in my head…

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Have you checked your humor lately?

How is it doing?

Two things my spiritual director persistently (!) speaks about is my need to grow in humility and my need to develop a sense of humor.

This past Christmas we received a delightful gift from Sr. Cecilia Maria’s grandmother that is helping me with the latter point, a book called Between Heaven and Mirth by Fr. James Martin, SJ. In this book Father assures us that God wants us to experience joy, to cultivate a sense of holy humor, and to laugh at life’s absurdities – not to mention our own humanity.  I invite you to rediscover the importance of humor and laughter in your daily life…and so does Pope Benedict!

I believe [God] has a great sense of humor. Sometimes he gives you something like a nudge and says, ‘Don’t take yourself so seriously!’ Humor is in fact an essential element in the mirth of creation. We can see how, in many matters in our lives, God wants to prod us into taking things a bit more lightly; to see the funny side of it; to get down off our pedestal and not to forget our sense of fun.

~Pope Benedict XVI – In God and the World

By the way, Anita (Grandmother!) recently came with Sr. Cecilia Maria’s parents for a visit. They kept speaking of the physical resemblance between her and Sr. Mary Magdalen. You decide…

Do you like Anita’s amber necklace? This “petrified tree sap” washes up on the shores of Denmark where Anita is from.

Solemn Commemoration of the Passion

February 17th, 2012

Blessings on this great Passionist Solemnity!

Each year on the Friday before Ash Wednesday Passionists throughout the world celebrate this titular feast of the Congregation given us by St. Paul of the Cross. It is a joyful celebration of the mystery of Good Friday, focusing on the Passion of Christ as “the most overwhelming sign of God’s love.” (St. Paul of the Cross)

The above display of the Instruments of the Passion created many years ago by Sr. Marie Michael and displayed each year in our chapel on this grand feast. Notice the Relic of the True Cross in the crucifix mounted in the upright cross.

In honor of this great feast of Divine Charity I want to share with you a reflection of Pope Benedict XVI given February 8, 2012. During his Wednesday audiences Pope Benedict has been reflecting on the Passion of Jesus.

Today I want to reflect with you on the cry of Jesus from the Cross, “My God, my God, why have you forsaken me?” This cry comes after a three-hour period when there was darkness over the whole land.

Darkness is an ambivalent symbol in the Bible – while it is frequently a sign of the power of evil, it can also serve to express a mysterious divine presence. Just as Moses was covered in the dark cloud when God appeared to him on the mountain, so Jesus on Calvary is wrapped in darkness. Even though the Father appears to be absent, in a mysterious way his loving gaze is focused upon the Son’s loving sacrifice on the Cross.

It is important to realize that Jesus’ cry of anguish is not an expression of despair: on the contrary, this opening verse of Psalm twenty-two conveys the entire content of the psalm, it expresses the confidence of the people of Israel that despite all the adversity they are experiencing, God remains present among them, he hears and answers his people’s cry.

This prayer of the dying Jesus teaches us to pray with confidence for all our brothers and sisters who are suffering, that they too may know the love of God who never abandons them.

He has loved us so generously! How can we ever doubt his love? Let’s be apostles of His love and help others come to know him in his greatest act of charity.

Unfathomable Love

February 14th, 2012

What comes to your mind when you see a monastery?

Here is a thought of Pope Benedict XVI…

As a spiritual oasis, a monastery reminds today’s world of the most important, and indeed, in the end, the only decisive thing: that there is an ultimate reason why life is worth living: God and his unfathomable love.

May we all come to know His unfathomable Love!

Blessings on Saint Valentine’s Day!

 *Photo of the sunrise on January 1, 2012  by Mark Schoppe

Pope Benedict’s Pro Orantibus Day Message

November 18th, 2011

This is by far my favorite message of Pope Benedict for Pro Orantibus Day. He gave this in 2006. Much to ponder…

USA April 2008

Just like his predecessors, our Beloved Pope Benedict XVI
upholds the value of contemplative cloistered life.

Of course he would ~ he is the Vicar of Christ!

Angelus Message of Pope Benedict XVI ~ Given in St. Peter’s Square, Sunday, November 19, 2006

Dear Brothers and Sisters,

     The day after tomorrow, 21 November, on the occasion of the liturgical Memorial of the Presentation of Mary, we will be celebrating Pro Orantibus Day, dedicated to remembering cloistered religious communities. It is an especially appropriate opportunity to thank the Lord for the gift of the numerous people in monasteries and hermitages who are totally dedicated to God in prayer, silence and concealment.

     Some may wonder what meaning and value their presence could have in our time, when there are so many situations of poverty and neediness with which to cope.

     Why “enclose oneself” for ever between the walls of a monastery and thereby deprive others of the contribution of one’s own skills and experience? How effective can the prayer of these cloistered Religious be for the solution of all the practical problems that continue to afflict humanity?

     Yet even today, often to the surprise of their friends and acquaintances, many people in fact frequently give up promising professional careers to embrace the austere rule of a cloistered monastery. What impels them to take such a demanding step other than the realization, as the Gospel teaches, that the Kingdom of heaven is “a treasure” for which it is truly worth giving up everything (cf. Mt 13: 44)?

     Indeed, these brothers and sisters of ours bear a silent witness to the fact that in the midst of the sometimes frenetic pace of daily events, the one support that never topples is God, the indestructible rock of faithfulness and love. “Everything passes, God never changes”, the great spiritual master Teresa of Avila wrote in one of her famous texts.

     And in the face of the widespread need to get away from the daily routine of sprawling urban areas in search of places conducive to silence and meditation, monasteries of contemplative life offer themselves as “oases” in which human beings, pilgrims on earth, can draw more easily from the wellsprings of the Spirit and quench their thirst along the way.

Central Park – the “green lungs” of New York City

     Thus, these apparently useless places are on the contrary indispensable, like the green “lungs” of a city:  they do everyone good, even those who do not visit them and may not even know of their existence.

     Dear brothers and sisters, let us thank the Lord, who in his Providence has desired male and female cloistered communities. May they have our spiritual and also our material support, so that they can carry out their mission to keep alive in the Church the ardent expectation of Christ’s Second Coming.

     For this, let us invoke the intercession of Mary, whom we contemplate on the Memorial of her Presentation in the Temple as Mother and model of the Church, who welcomes in herself both vocations: to virginity and to marriage, to contemplative life and to active life.

What is Pro Orantibus Day?

November 15th, 2011

Pro Orantibus Day Recalls Cloistered Communities as the “Heart” of the Church

Chicago, IL — Catholics throughout the world are encouraged to honor the cloistered and monastic life on Pro Orantibus Day, which is Monday, Nov. 21, 2011.

“The primary purpose of Pro Orantibus Day (“For Those Who Pray”) is to thank God for the tremendous gift of the cloistered and monastic vocation in the Church’s life,” noted Fr. Thomas Nelson, O.Praem., National Director of the Institute on Religious Life. “Since the lives of these women and men religious dedicated to prayer and sacrifice is often hidden, this annual celebration reminds us of the need to support their unique mission within the Body of Christ,” he added.

In 1997 Bl. Pope John Paul II asked that this ecclesial event be observed worldwide on November 21, the Memorial of the Blessed Virgin Mary’s Presentation in the Temple. It is a special day to thank those in the cloistered and monastic life for serving as “a leaven of renewal and of the presence of the spirit of Christ in the world.” It is also intended to remind others of the need to provide spiritual and material support “for those who pray.”

Pope Benedict XVI has spoken often of the tremendous value of the cloistered, contemplative life. Speaking to a group of cloistered Dominican nuns in Rome, the Holy Father referred to such religious as “the heart” which provides blood to the rest of the Body of Christ. He noted that in their work and prayer, together with Christ, they are the “heart” of the Church and in their desire for God’s love they approach the ultimate goal.

Special thanks to Cloistered Life for the above article.

Experiencing the Risen One

April 25th, 2011

    In the refectory (the place in the monastery where we eat while keeping a recollected silence) we are listening to Pope Benedict’s book Jesus of Nazareth: Holy Week. We are finishing up the section on the Resurrection and when I heard this I had to share it with you. It ties in so well with Fr. Ray’s homily which I noted in my previous post. It is also a beautiful note on feminine spirituality and that receptivity…openness to the Lord which we all need to inculcate…that includes the men too! ;)

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Just as there were only women standing by the Cross – apart from the beloved disciple – so too the first encounter with the risen Lord was destined to be for them.  The Church’s juridical structure is founded on Peter and the Eleven, but in the day-to-day life of the Church it is the women who are constantly opening the door to the Lord and accompanying him to the Cross, and so it is they who come to experience the Risen One.”

~ page 263

   

James Reid
Woodcut
From The Life of Christ in Woodcuts by James Reid (Farrar & Rinehart, Inc.: 1930)

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