Saint Scholastica, pray for us..



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H.T. Library ~ Catholic Fertility Treatment Articles



Infertility Treatments, in Accord With Church Teaching by Dr. Thomas Hilgers




Venerable Henriette DeLille

I wanted to share a film with you called “The Courage to Love”  this is about 
Ven. Henriette DeLille.  She was proclaimed venerable on March 27, 2010 by Pope Benedict XVI    for her heroic virtues.  I do believe her intercession is much needed in these days that we are now living in today.  Hope you get the chance to watch the film, it’s wonderful!

more on Ven. Henriette:


Prayer for the Beatification of Henriette DeLille

O good and gracious God, you called Henriette DeLille to give herself in service and in love to the slaves and the sick, to the orphan and the aged, to the forgotten and the despised. Grant that inspired by her life we might be renewed in heart and mind. If it be your will, may she one day be raised to the honor of sainthood. By her prayers may we live in harmony and peace. Through Jesus Christ our Lord, Amen. 


Nihil Obstat: Rev. Msgr. Franz Graef, STD

Imprimatur: Most. Rev. Francis B. Schulte, 

Archbishop of New Orleans, August 23, 1997


For further information (such as holy cards), write:

Director, Henriette Delille Commission Office

6901 Chef Menteur Highway

New Orleans, LA 70126-5290

Why We Have Children

By Timothy Dalrymple
I hate the memory of it. I hate it.
I hate how stiff my daughter’s body felt in my arms that night. I hate how vacant and soulless her face had become, unmoving save for the veined whites of her eyes as the irises fluttered up under the skull.
It happened on a cold October evening, when an early snowfall still covered the streets north of Boston. We parked beside our friends’ home, and I noticed the flush of red in my daughter’s cheeks. I checked her brow—it was hot. I should have done something more, but I thought perhaps she had simply over-heated in her coat and car seat. So I took her inside and watched as she tried to play. On most days our daughter, thirteen months old, was an overflowing wellspring of energy and laughter and fleet-footed enthusiasm. On this day, something seemed off.
We sat down to dinner, and then it happened. Sitting beside me in her booster chair, she turned her head upward—further, further, and then unnaturally far, as though she followed the path of a butterfly along the ceiling and down the wall behind her. Her arms were clamped to her sides, and when I bent around her I saw her rolling eyes. She looked possessed.
A moment later we were back in the car, racing through the snow-swept streets as I clutched her tiny convulsing body against my chest. Her lungs did not inhale so much as they shuddered in pitiful little gasps. I whispered “it’s okay” and “daddy’s here,” but it was not okay. Every time the orange glow of a passing streetlamp brushed across her face, it showed the same rolling white eyes. That’s the memory I hate the most: the memory of what it felt like to be losing her. I was pinned between the immensity above and the miniscule below. The universe of my care, all my joy in the world, was wrapped in this frail two-foot and twenty-pound vessel, this brilliant soul enfleshed. And as the soul slipped through my fingers, I sensed it above me: the endless ocean of grief that would fall and consume me if I lost her.
* * * * *
Why do we have children? The question lies beneath social and political issues we confront today, from abortion and adoption to declining fertility rates in developed nations and the relative virtues of “eastern” and “western” forms of parenting. In 2010 a whole host of articles and commentaries debated the finding that parenthood does not make us happier. So what is the point? Why do we make all the extraordinary sacrifices that parenthood requires?
There was no part of me, as we rushed to the emergency room that night, that wished my daughter gone and my freedom restored. Not the slightest part of me thought I should be happier without her. Instead, I knew with terrible certainty that if this small, fragile, quivering creature against my chest were to leave me, she would take all my joy with her. And no part of me would have preferred that she had never come to be, if she could only be for thirteen months and then be no more. Her thirteen months had made my life worth living.
I had felt a twinge of disappointment when the doctor informed us that we were having a girl. Connecting with boys had always come easily; a little wrestling, a little flying around the room, a few uncivilized sound effects, and we were buds. Yet when I went home from the ultrasound, and sat down alone to write, I dissolved into a spectacular emotional wreck. At the thought of fathering a daughter, waves of joy rolled through me. I loved my little girl long before I met her. I read her stories in the womb, sang to her, prayed for her. It wouldn’t matter what she looked like or what her personality was. She was mine—mine to nurture and protect, mine to train and guide, and mine to love with all my might.
We have children because love overflows. I believe as a Christian that I am created in the image of a God who is Love, a God whose love so desired an object that it brought us into being. Although the wisdom and power of love within us is clouded and twisted by sin, still the image of Love is there. We have children because love is essentially creative, and because our souls long for other souls we can love lavishly and forever.
Love precedes the beloved. That is why it is unconditional. In bearing children we participate in God’s continuing creative act, and in sustaining and guiding and sacrificing for our children we reflect God’s redemptive act. Theologically, then, we have children because we are made after the image of a God who had children, a God who is irreducibly relational and endlessly creative.
We have children because they make us human. Throughout my teens and twenties, I often went for years without being deeply moved. My friends called me even-keeled or unflappable, but the truth is that I almost never felt—really felt—anything at all. Not joy, not sorrow, not anger or hurt or fear. This might sound like a good thing. It was not. Every few years my heart would return to me, and for no apparent reason I would find emotions falling down like spring rains on parched soil. I was always relieved to feel connected again, vulnerable, alive—but then the season of feeling would fade and would leave me impassive again.
That changed when I learned we were having a girl. Perhaps there is something especially sweet in the father-daughter relationship, or perhaps it was just that the image of my child became concrete. Whatever the reason, I spent the remainder of the day staring at the ultrasound photo and downloading father-daughter songs in a joyous tearful mess.
Blessedly wounded, I never recovered. Lifelong singles can, of course, lead joyful and fulfilling lives and there are other ways in which they are shaped. In retrospect, however, my life prior to parenthood was like a symphony constrained to a single note. In the year that followed my daughter’s birth, I felt—really felt—the whole spectrum of human emotions, the depth and richness of human experience. Through my daughter’s eyes, I remembered wonder. Her laughter and unbridled joy reminded me why the world is good. She was a vessel of grace, a sacrament, and she returned me to life.
She made me human. We make children who make us.
Finally, we have children because children teach us to love. Marriage tests and reforms us, and begins to teach us to give for the other’s own sake, and not in the hope of reward or return; yet marriage promises that the spouse will do the same. Marital love cannot approach the self-sacrificial love of the parent, in which we pour ourselves out for the joy of seeing our children grow and flourish. In loving our children, many of us learn to love truly for the first time.
My daughter wrapped her hand around my finger mere moments after entering the world. She was comforted. I was captured. Although I was finishing my dissertation, I spent the nights in her room, helping her sleep through the pain of a milk allergy, then of colic, and then of reflux. I never asked for a break—not because of any virtue in me, but because I knew I could help her, and because it is sweet to give yourself when your beloved needs you.
My daughter survived that terrible night. As we neared the hospital, her jaw began to twitch, and just when I thought she was choking she was actually regaining control of her body. Her eyes focused on me, and she drew breaths swift and deep, confused and disoriented. Then finally she began to cry—long, deep sobs that were the sweetest music her father had ever heard.
The frigid night air had helped to cool her. Her brain was undamaged, and she has never since suffered another febrile seizure. And I have still never wondered whether I might have been happier without her. I certainly might have indulged myself more. But I would never have known this overflowing, self-giving love that has changed me forever.
We have no choice but to give ourselves for our children, but we learn that in giving ourselves we receive our selves. In the frailty of this little form that called such an immense love out of me, this bundle of winsome life and running legs and embracing arms, I share in the quintessentially human condition of loving recklessly what is fragile, fleeting, and at risk. There is nothing for it; I cannot help myself. Even at thirteen months, my daughter was sweet and vulnerable and of immeasurable sacred worth. She was not perfect, but she was everything that was good in me, and yet so much better, the highest art I had created, my only true thing in a counterfeit world. She was my little girl. She still is, and always will be. And the joy of loving and being loved by her—well, it was worth any sacrifice and any risk.
Dr. Timothy Dalrymple is the Associate Direct of Content at Patheos, and writes weekly on faith, politics, and culture for Patheos’ Evangelical Portal. Follow him at his blog, Philosophical Fragments, on Facebook or on Twitter.

Mother of Millions, You tube, and a note from our Poor Clare Colettines

Hi everyone, I just received this email from our beautiful Poor Clare Colettines in Wales.  I have been thinking a lot and praying  for Bishop Jia since I read the report about China threatening to take over the orphanage which he is responsible.  Please bring support in this great need!  God bless you and keep walking in the truth of our Holy Roman Catholic Church.
__________________________________________________

Dear Little hearts,

May we invite you to view and pray with our new U Tube contribution. It is to raise interest and attention to the plight of Bishop Jia in China. The music was composed at the monastery and sung by the sisters. Please pray for all our brothers and sister in China, with love.





__________________________________________________

Mother of Millions


This song is dedicated to the Catholic Bishop of Zhengding, China, Julius Jia Zhiguo, who, twenty years ago found an abandoned handicapped baby on his door step.  In between prison and re-education camp, and usually under house arrest with 24 hour surveillance, he has cared for the hundred or so handicapped orphans that followed the first with the aid of a community of religious sisters.  The Chinese authorities now demand that the Bishop should sign over the children or spend the rest of his life – he is 75 – in re-education camp.

The Mother of Millions of the refrain is St Colette, the Poor Clare patron saint of children.  Haizi is mandarin for child.  The words and music were created by the little sisters of the Poor Clare Colettine Community of Ty Mam Duw Wales, who also sing it on this track.

If you want to know more about Bishop Jia and his children please visit


Haizi, Haizi 
In the dawn, upon the doorstep,
lies a naked new born child
with a torn and twisted shoulder
and an unsuspecting smile.

Haizi, Haizi

Child conceived without permission,

with no license to arrive,

with no Yuan to buy exemption,

with no leave to be alive.

Haizi, Haizi

You tell no one where you came from, 

laid before the Bishop’s door

in your silent pain you whimper

like the hundred other more.

    Mother of millions,

    who carried no child of her own,

    pray for the orphan, the wounded, the unborn;

    take the child rejected

    neglected and alone.

Haizi, Haizi

From the poor and humble Bishop

who spent twenty years in jail,

from the thirty little sisters.

from the shelter of the veil –

Haizi, Haizi

– they will take you. And your Bishop,

‘neath interrogation lamps,

still cant read the lies writ backwards

in Re-education Camps.

    Mother of millions,

    who carried no child of her own,

    pray for the orphan, the wounded, the unborn;

    take the child rejected,

    neglected and alone.



Press Release 
January 11th 2011
The Cardinal Kung foundation

Contact Joseph Kung 
PO Box 8086 
Stanford, CT06905,USA

Telephone 203 329 9712



A TWENTY YEAR OLD UNDERGROUND CATHOLIC HANDICAPPED ORPHANAGE IN HEBEI CHINA, IS UNDER IMMINENT THREAT TO BE FORCIBLY TAKEN OVER BY CHINESE GOVERNMENT

What is described in the captioned title has not yet happened but may come at any time as Chinese officials have informed Bishop Jia Zhiguo, the founder and administrator of the disabled orphanage. The Government has made clear that it will use force if it does not get the bishop¹s agreement to the Government takeover.  Bishop Jia has so far refused consent.

We beg world media and leaders to stand up for these around 100 helpless, disabled orphans and to voice their concern and appeal to Chinese authorities.

Around twenty years ago, a handicapped infant was left on Bishop Jia¹s doorstep, the Bishop took the abandoned baby into his home, the child is now twenty years old. After the first baby the word spread and more disabled infants some of them very sick were abandoned at his door.  The good Bishop took every one in.  He founded a community of thirty Catholic nuns devoted to their care.  It is located in WuQiu, Jinzhou, Hebei.

Bishop Jia now seventy five years old was consecrated Bishop of Zhengding Hebei in 1980 by the Pope¹s mandate.  He has never joined the Catholic Patriotic Association; he is an underground Bishop.  He has spent approximately twenty years in prison and has been arrested 13 times since 2004.

In December various named officials took Bishop Jia away on three different occasions; they tried to force him to sign an agreement to release his orphans to the Government, to send away the nuns, and they threatened to take Bishop Jia away for prolonged Ostudy sessions¹ without any time limit. He was told that the orphans would be taken away with or without his agreement, by force if necessary.

Full statement and pictures available from the Kung foundation

PLEASE WRITE TO THE AMBASSADOR OF THE PEOPLES REPUBLIC OF CHINA

In UK

H.E. Mr. Liu Xiaoming

Embassy of the Peoples Republic of China

49 Portland Place , London W1B 1JL

Their email is 

But a mailed letter is more effective.


In USA

Ambassador Zhang YeSui,

Embassy of The People’s Republic of China,

3505 International Place, N.W.,

Washington, D.C., 20008.

Dear friends, time is of the essence

Ty Mam Duw Poor Clare Colettine Community

Upper Aston Hall Lane

Hawarden

North Wales

CH5 3EN

GB

Prayer For Asking Graces Through The Intercession of the Servant of GOD Pope John Paul II:

O Blessed Trinity we thank You for having graced the Church with Pope John Paul II and for allowing the tenderness of your Fatherly care, the glory of the cross of Christ, and the splendor of the Holy Spirit, to shine through him.  Trusting fully in Your infinite mercy and in the maternal intercession of Mary, he has given us a living image of Jesus the Good Shepherd, and has shown us that holiness is the necessary measure of ordinary Christian life and is the way of achieving eternal communion with you.  Grant us, by his intercession, and according to Your will, the graces we implore, hoping that he will soon be numbered among your saints. Amen.

Continue to follow the novena for readings of the day:



Act of Consecration to Our Lady of the Miraculous Medal


O Virgin Mother of God,
Mary Immaculate,
we dedicate and consecrate ourselves to you
under the title of Our Lady of the Miraculous Medal.
May this Medal be for each one of us
a sure sign of your affection for us
and a constant reminder of our duties towards you.
Ever while wearing it,
may we be blessed by your loving protection
and preserved in the grace of your Son.
O most powerful Virgin,
Mother of our Saviour,
keep us close to you every moment of our lives.
Obtain for us,
your children,
the grace of a happy death;
so that, in union with you,
we may enjoy the bliss of heaven forever.

Amen. 



   O Mary, conceived without sin, pray for us who have 
   recourse to you. (3 times)