Sunday, February 26, 2012

U Need uCatholic


Our Holy Father Pope Benedict XVI said “the Church and its message [must] continue to be present in the great aeropagus of social communication..." and uCatholic answered the call.
uCatholic features Catholic news, a daily catechism lesson, hymns, apologetics, Catholic studies and a list of the linage of 266 Popes, starting with Peter whom Jesus called the Rock upon which He would build his church, all the way to the present Pope Benedict XVI.   You get info on the saint of the day, the daily readings, videos, prayers and more. 
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Your Guide to a Catholic Lent



What is Lent?
Lent is the forty-day liturgical season of fasting, special prayer and almsgiving in preparation for Easter. The name "Lent" is from the Middle English Lenten and Anglo-Saxon Lenten, meaning spring; its more primitive ecclesiastical name was the "forty days," tessaracoste in Greek. The number "forty" is first noted in the Canons of Nicaea (A.D. 325), likely in imitation of Jesus' fast in the desert before His public ministry (with Old Testament precedent in Moses and Elijah). By the fourth century, in most of the West, it referred to six days' fast per week of six weeks (Sundays were excluded); in the seventh century the days from Ash Wednesday through the First Sunday were added to make the number forty.

Follow these link to a comprehensive look at the disciplines of Lent:
http://www.hitechcatholic.com/2012/02/your-guide-to-lent-which-begins-next.html

• Stations of the Cross
What almsgiving really means
What are you doing for Lent this year?
Fasting and abstinence
Bless me, Father, for I have sinned...
Families can make Lenten memoriesPretzels: A Lenten treat
10 tips for making the season more meaningful
The story behind Passion Plays
Lenten prayers and devotions
2012 Lenten message from Pope Benedict XVI

Sunday, February 12, 2012

Pope on Justice, Life, Truth.

“America first proclaimed its independence on the basis of self-evident moral truths. America will remain a beacon of freedom for the world as long as it stands by those moral truths which are the very heart of its historical experience.  And so America: If you want peace, work for justice. If you want justice, defend life. It you want life, embrace the truth, the truth revealed by God."  \

-- Pope John Paul II, St. Louis, Missouri, January 1999

Stations of the Cross Around the World with Catholic Relief Services: Station 2 Jesus Carries the Cross

The Stations of the Cross Around the World with Catholic Relief Services (CRS). 
Station 2 Jesus carries the cross.  In rural El Salvador, women and children walk for hours each day to the river to retrieve and carry water that will be used for cooking, bathing and drinking.  When CRS helped build a well in rural El Salvador, 130 families in El Pedregal gained access to clean water in their homes.
http://orb.crs.org/wp-content/uploads/2009/11/ORB-2012-Stations-of-the-Cross.pdf

Catholic Social Teaching: RIGHTS AND RESPONSIBILITIES.
We must take responsibility to protect the rights of all people. These rights include the right to life, food, water, shelter, education, and employment, along with political and cultural rights.

Thursday, February 9, 2012

Challenge for Lent: Work on Becoming a Decent Human Being



A friend just shared this article with me.  I read it carefully and thoughtfully, and think this is a valuable message for any disciple of Jesus Christ.

http://www.sojo.net/blogs/2011/12/27/bait-and-switch-contemporary-christianity

On a business trip this past week, I gave up my aisle seat and took a middle seat so that a mother and her little girl could sit together. Why?  Because as a Roman Catholic, I must value the family, I must value little children, I must do little tiny sacrifices to make someone else's day go better.  As the article says, it was a tiny step towards becoming a more "decent human being". 

I think I'll make this my goal to work on during Lent, while, of course, not neglecting the Sacraments and prayer.

Sunday, February 5, 2012

Catholic Relief Services has Stations of the Cross for Lent 2012

http://orb.crs.org/wp-content/uploads/2009/11/ORB-2012-Stations-of-the-Cross.pdf

Catholic Relief Services has a nice Stations of the Cross handout for Lent 2012.  Each Station is linked to an injustice around the world, what CRS is doing about it (and you, too, through your donations and prayers), and what Catholic Social Teaching says about it.

Here is the first Station as an example:

The Stations of the Cross

station 1 Jesus is condemned
In Madagascar, the majority of the population live in rural areas and work as subsistence
farmers. Ineffective farming techniques, limited sanitation systems and frequent droughts
have condemned more than half of the population to live below the poverty line.

catholic social teaching: CARE FOR GOD’S CREATION
We are called to be good stewards of what has been entrusted to us. Through protecting
the environment in which we live, we respect the goodness of nature, a gift God has given.

Catholic Relief Services has worked with the Malagasy people to improve farming methods
and foster environmental sustainability in rural communities throughout the country.