Prayer for Preemies

A Premature Baby’s Prayer
God bless the little child behind the plastic wall
For all he knows is the ringing of the bells and
the blurred images around him. He has been taken
from my womb without warning and I long to hold him
in my arms.
 
Lord, I ask in your name that my child be healed.
I am willing to accept your decision no matter what
it will be. I am willing to take on the responsibilities
for caring for this child. I am willing to give this
child love and understanding no matter the cost.
 
Please Lord help me to accept reality and what has
happened without explanation or warning. Help me
face the fact that this is not my fault and that
I was given a special task to complete here on Earth.
 
God give my child the strength to make it through another
second, minute, hour and day as each moment is
a blessing and a triumph from heaven.
 
God, may you give the strength and compassion
to the caregivers and nurses that take care of my child
May you keep my child protected and free from all injury
and pain.
 
Please take away the guilt and burden from my heart dear
Lord. It is heavy and I feel it is all my fault.
Take it away dear Lord. Sweet Jesus allow me the strength
and understanding I need to communicate with the Doctors
and Nurses.
 
As you see dear Lord, I am at your mercy for the life of
my child. Please leave him here on Earth and know that
I will provide all the love and understanding that
this child needs. I accept the challenge and will be
your humble servant dear Lord.
 
~Author unknown~

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Let’s study Saint Simon of Cyrene

Since starting this ministry, I must say Simon of Cyrene is someone who has become very near and dear to my heart.  I pray that you are getting to know him also as you carry your cross, which is also the cross Christ bore for you.  

I know without a doubt, it is sometimes very difficult to comprehend what exactly Christ did for us in regards to our own human suffering.  The only way this is possible to understand is with the gift of faith, if you feel that you do not have this kind of faith, that believes and yet does not see ask Our Father in Heaven for this gift of FAITH.  He will cover you and take care of you as you ask HIM.  Trust in Him, who loves you more then any other ever will!

I believe Simon was given this FAITH as he carried the cross with Christ, this is what we do as we embrace our own cross with Christ, this is the chaplet of Hannah’s Tears, uniting our cross with Christ and our yes with Mary our mother in Heaven.  Let us ask St. Simon for his intercession as we learn to embrace our own cross with Christ each and every day that we may receive the give of “Faith, Hope, and Joy” in the midst of our sufferings God will use it for HIS GREATER GLORY!

Cyrene the principal city of that part of northern Africa which was sufficiently called Cyrenaica, lying between Carthage and Egypt, and corresponding with the modern Tripoli. Though on the African coast, it was a Greek city, and the Jews were settled there in large numbers. The Greek colonization of this part of Africa under Battus began of early as B.C. 631. After the death of Alexander the Great it became a dependency of Egypt, and a Roman province B.C. 75. Simon, who bore our Savior’s cross, (Matthew 27:32) was a native of Cyrene. Jewish dwellers in Cyrenaica were in Jerusalem at Pentecost, (Acts 2:10) and gave their name to one of the synagogues in Jerusalem. (Acts 6:9) Christian converts from Cyrene were among those who contributed actively to the formation of the first Gentile church at Antioch. (Acts 11:20)


Matthew 27:32 And coming forth, they found a man, a 

Cyrenian, by name Simon: him they impressed that he might bear his cross.

Mark 15:21 And they compel one Simon a Cyrenian, who passed by, coming out of the country, the father of Alexander and Rufus, to bear his cross. 
Luke 23:26 And as they led him away, they laid hold upon one Simon, a Cyrenian, coming out of the country, and on him they laid the cross, that he might bear it after Jesus.




Prayer

Heavenly Father, whose most dear Son, as He walked the way of the Cross, accepted the service of Simon of Cyrene to carry his physical burden for him: grant us each the grace gladly to bear one another’s burdens, for the love of him who said, “As you did it to the least of these my brethren, you did it to me,” your Son Jesus Christ our Lord, who now lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit, one God, now and for ever.    Amen. 

The Very Lonely Experience of Grief

By Sue Elvis
At an 18 week ultrasound our unborn baby was diagnosed with a diaphragmatic hernia. We were told our baby would probably not survive after birth because there was not enough room in his lung cavity to allow sufficient lung tissue to develop: he wouldn’t be able to breathe without the aid of a respirator. We prayed for a miracle but Thomas lived only 28 hours. He was born on 9th November.
From my diary
26th November
I saw Dr M. for the first time since Thomas died. I don’t know if she was going to say anything about our baby but I got out my photo box to show her anyway. Dr M. cried as she looked at the photos…
The receptionist, Jenny asked me how I was, on my way out. I told her we’d had our baby, and it was obvious that it hadn’t crossed her mind all was not well. She’d forgotten we’d had problems during the pregnancy. She was taken aback when I said, “He died two weeks ago.” Jenny also looked at the photos and she also cried. I was quite calm and dry-eyed and felt like the only person in control.
However moods change quickly and this afternoon I am weepy…

I remember how reluctant people were to bring up the subject of our baby. I wanted and needed to talk about Thomas but no one said, “Tell me about your baby. Tell me about Thomas.”  I took my photo box wherever I went, in the hope that someone would want to share the photos of our son.
I hadn’t seen Doctor M. for some weeks because she’d passed my antenatal care onto a specialist. When I went to see her two weeks after Thomas’ birth about another matter, I wanted to tell her about our son. I had my Thomas box with me and I wanted to show her all the sad but beautiful photos. I wanted her to take an interest in our baby who had so recently died. The doctor didn’t immediately ask about Thomas. I thought maybe she wasn’t going to say anything but I was determined to show her all the evidence of his fleeting life. I think I wanted Doctor M. to suffer too. I wanted her to feel my pain, to leave her seemingly happy life even for a few minutes and join me in my sorrow.
I was upset the receptionist Jenny didn’t remember that our baby was probably going to die after birth. How could she have forgotten something that we’d thought about every minute of every day for the last few months? And so I wanted her to feel our pain too. I wanted her to cry even a few tears, to relieve me of a few of mine.
I didn’t weep with the doctor or the receptionist. Someone once remarked that we only cry with those people with whom we feel comfortable, those we feel truly care about us and our sorrow. Maybe this is true.
When I returned home it didn’t take long for the tears to appear again. I was back alone with my grief. The doctor had probably dried her eyes and was attending to another patient. I’d touched her with my sorrow for a few minutes but it was my pain, not hers.  She couldn’t really feel the depths of my suffering. No one can unless they have had a similar experience.
Grief is a very lonely existence.
But I found out that sharing experiences with other grief-stricken parents helped. We’ve all passed through that one way door of intense suffering. We all, without wanting to, belong to that exclusive club where the price of membership is so very high: the loss of a child. We all know the depths of the pain. And we all realise we are not alone. There is someone else who understands.
Please share my stories on my blog Sue Elvis Writes

Good Shepherd Sunday, May 15,2011

Gospel
Jesus said:  “Amen, amen, I say to you, whoever does not enter a sheepfold through the gate but climbs over elsewhere is a thief and a robber.  But whoever enters through the gate is the shepherd of the sheep. The gatekeeper opens it for him, and the sheep hear his voice, as the shepherd calls his own sheep by name and leads them out.  When he has driven out all his own, he walks ahead of them, and the sheep follow him, because they recognize his voice.  But they will not follow a stranger; they will run away from him, because they do not recognize the voice of strangers.”  Although Jesus used this figure of speech, the Pharisees did not realize what he was trying to tell them.  So Jesus said again, “Amen, amen, I say to you, I am the gate for the sheep. All who came before me are thieves and robbers, but the sheep did not listen to them.  I am the gate.  Whoever enters through me will be saved,  and will come in and go out and find pasture.  A thief comes only to steal and slaughter and destroy; I came so that they might have life and have it more abundantly.”

WE ENTRUST, O MARY, AND CONSECRATE THE WHOLE WORLD TO YOUR IMMACULATE HEART!


Pope John Paul II


On Thursday, 13 May 1982, after the con-celebrated Mass in Fatima, Pope John Paul II made the following act of consecration of the modern world to Our Lady of Fatima.

1. “We have recourse to your protection, holy Mother of God.”

As I utter the words of this antiphon with which the Church of Christ has prayed for centuries, I find myself today in this place chosen by you, O Mother, and by you particularly loved.

I am here, united with all the Pastors of the Church in that particular bond whereby we constitute a body and a college, just as Christ desired the Apostles to be in union with Peter.

In the bond of this union, I utter the words of the present Act, in which I wish to include, once more, the hopes and anxieties of the Church in the modern world.

Forty years ago and again ten years later, your servant Pope Pius XII, having before his eyes the painful experience of the human family, entrusted and consecrated to your Immaculate Heart the whole world, especially the peoples for which you had particular love and solicitude.

This world of individuals and nations I too have before my eyes today, as I renew the entrusting and consecration carried out by my Predecessor in the See of Peter: the world of the second millennium that is drawing to a close, the modern world, our world today!

The Church, mindful of the Lord’s words: “Go… and make disciples of all nations… and lo, I am with you always, to the close of the age” (Mt 28:19-20), renewed, at the Second Vatican Council, her awareness of her mission in this world.

And therefore, O Mother of individuals and peoples, you who “know all their sufferings and their hopes”, you who have a mother’s awareness of all the struggles between good and evil, between light and darkness, which afflict the modern world, accept the cry which we, as though moved by the Holy Spirit, address directly to your Heart. Embrace, with the love of the Mother and Handmaid, this human world of ours, which we entrust and consecrate to you, for we are full of disquiet for the earthly and eternal destiny of individuals and peoples.

In a special way we entrust and consecrate to you those individuals and nations which particularly need to be entrusted and consecrated.
We have recourse to your protection, holy Mother of God: reject not the prayers we send up to you in our necessities.


Reject them not!


Accept our humble trust and our act of entrusting!


2. “For God so loved the world that he gave his only Son, that whoever believes in him should not perish but have eternal life” (Jn 3:16).

It was precisely by reason of this love that the Son of God consecrated himself for all mankind: “And for their sake I consecrate myself, that they also may be consecrated in truth” (Jn 17:19).

By reason of that consecration the disciples of all ages are called to spend themselves for the salvation of the world, and to supplement Christ’s afflictions for the sake of his body, that is the Church (cf. 2 Cor 12:15; Col 1:24).

Before you, Mother of Christ, before your Immaculate Heart, I today, together with the whole Church, unite myself with our Redeemer in this his consecration for the world and for people, which only in his divine Heart has the power to obtain pardon and to secure reparation.

The power of this consecration lasts for all time and embraces all individuals, peoples and nations. It overcomes every evil that the spirit of darkness is able to awaken, and has in fact awakened in our times, in the heart of man and in his history.

The Church, the Mystical Body of Christ, unites herself, through the service of Peter’s successor, to this consecration by our Redeemer.

Oh, how deeply we feel the need for consecration on the part of humanity and of the world—our modern world—in union with Christ himself! The redeeming work of Christ, in fact, must be shared in by the world by means of the Church.

Oh, how pained we are by all the things in the Church and in each one of us that are opposed to holiness and consecration! How pained we are that the invitation to repentance, to conversion, to prayer, has not met with the acceptance that it should have received!

How pained we are that many share so coldly in Christ’s work of Redemption! That “what is lacking in Christ’s afflictions” is so insufficiently completed in our flesh.

And so, blessed be all those souls that obey the call of eternal Love! Blessed be all those who, day after day, with undiminished generosity accept your invitation, O Mother, to do what your Jesus tells them (cf. Jn 2:5) and give the Church and the world a serene testimony of lives inspired by the Gospel.

Above all blessed be you, the Handmaid of the Lord, who in the fullest way obey the divine call!

Hail to you, who are wholly united to the redeeming consecration of your Son!

Mother of the Church! Enlighten the People of God along the paths of faith, of hope and love! Help us to live with the whole truth of the consecration of Christ for the entire human family of the modern world.

3. In entrusting to you, O Mother, the world, all individuals and peoples, we also entrust to you the consecration itself, for the world’s sake, placing it in your motherly Heart.

Oh, Immaculate Heart! Help us to conquer the menace of evil, which so easily takes root in the hearts of the people of today, and whose immeasurable effects already weigh down upon our modern world and seem to block the paths towards the future!

From famine and war, deliver us.


From nuclear war, from incalculable self-destruction, from every kind of war, deliver us.


From sins against the life of man from its very beginning, deliver us.


From hatred and from the demeaning of the dignity of the children of God, deliver us.


From every kind of injustice in the life of society, both national and international, deliver us.


From readiness to trample on the commandments of God, deliver us.


From attempts to stifle in human hearts the very truth of God, deliver us.


From sins against the Holy Spirit, deliver us, deliver us.


Accept, O Mother of Christ, this cry laden with the sufferings of all individual human beings, laden with the sufferings of whole societies.

Let there be revealed, once more. in the history of the world your infinite power of merciful Love. May it put a stop to evil. May it transform consciences. May your Immaculate Heart reveal for all the light of Hope.

INFERTILE but not without HOPE


Elisabeth Leseur (Servant of God) suffered many pains, one of them being infertility and a childless home. Her other great sufferings were her husband’s unbelief in God.  She by her great love for God and the Church offered her physical, emotional and spiritual sufferings to Christ Jesus Crucified to win back her husbands soul from the great errors of atheism.  She united her heart to our Trinitarian God.  She never once questioned the unique call that she was given by Our Lord.  She embraced her cross with humility and love, just as Christ Jesus did for all of us.  She learned through her pains to follow her shepherd, Christ Jesus, and remained close to Him in Holy Eucharist.  This is the great secret to all of our own sufferings that is hiding ourselves within the Eucharistic Heart of Christ.

We Need to do MORE!

This email was perfect timing to me as I was feeling the same way in my own heart.  Is anyone else hearing this call?  I hadn’t heard this about the Holy Father until today so it was truly a confirmation of the Holy Spirit to read this cry for more.  

The Holy Father is trying to prepare the army of faithful, let us awaken our weary hearts and do what we are being called to do today.  

I am not just saying this to you, but to myself as I’ve had my own struggles with prayer these days.  We must and should do what we can, so, let’s pull out those rosaries and begin for it truly is our weapon of choice as it leads us into the life of Christ.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Dear Little hearts,
The Spirit is calling us into the garden, calling us into solitude and silence!!  Calling us to prayer… The Spirit is calling us to Mary, to Jesus… the Gospels… God has created gardens among things to be havens of peace, replenishment and rest…. and for prayer… It is a space where the Spirit can be free.  Our Holy Father Pope Benedict calls us to renew our focus on praying the Rosary, works of art are achieved by continuing practice, failures and successes, and it is just the same with prayer. 
So let us try and respond to the call from our Holy Father which comes from his heart to ours, but primarily the Holy Spirit gives Holy Father the words he wants us all to hear… Let us meet in the Rose garden of Mary, within the Garden of God.
Lovingly,
Your Poor Clare Colettines TMD
Wales, UK



Benedict XVI: Pray the Rosary With More Intensity
VATICAN CITY, MAY 11, 2011 (Zenit.org).-
 
Benedict XVI is encouraging all to “intensify” the practice of praying the rosary during May, the month the Church dedicates to the Mother of God.
At the end of today’s general audience, the Pope urged the youth present “to value this traditional Marian prayer, which helps to understand better and to assimilate the central moments of the salvation realized by Christ.”
To the sick, he exhorted them to “to turn with confidence to the Virgin Mary through this pious exercise, entrusting all your needs to her.”
Finally, to the newlyweds, he invited them to “make the praying of the rosary in the family, a moment of spiritual growth under the gaze of the Virgin Mary.”

St. Damien of Molokai pray for us…

Let Fr. Damien’s lesson of hope and endurance be an example in your own life.  No matter what your cross, lift it to Jesus uniting your pain, suffering and misunderstanding to HIM.  He has endured everything you are going through; let HIM heal you, and teach you what you need to learn through this journey.  

The light will come, for Christ Jesus is the LIGHT who shines in the darkness.  May His light also shine through you.






Feastday: May 11

St. Damien, brother on the journey,
Happy and generous missionary,
who loved the Gospel more than your life,
who for love of Jesus left your family,
your homeland, your security, your dreams,
Teach us to give our lives with a joy like yours,
to be in solidarity with the outcasts of the world,
to celebrate and contemplate the Eucharist
as the source of our commitment.
Help us to love to the very end
and, in the strength of the Spirit,
to persevere in compassion
for the poor and forgotten
so that we might be good disciples of 
Jesus and Mary.
Amen.


Bishop Sheen on Marriage & Elisabeth Leseur

Listen to Archbishop Sheen tell the story of (click on her name and then press the play button above the Time Magazine picture) Elisabeth Leseur who also has a cause for canonization.  Her current status in the process of canonization is that of a Servant of God. Elisabeth was born in Paris to a wealthy bourgeois French family of Corsican descent.   

Resource:  http://www.op-stjoseph.org/blog/30th_anniversary_of_death_of_fulton_sheen