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


Book Tour – “Framing Faith: A Pictorial History of Communities of Faith”

Take a look at this beautiful book that lifts the culture of our FAITH for generations.

 written by Sarah Piccini –  photography by Ivana Pavelka & ARTS Engage!

Framing Faith tells the story of the faith of immigrants and their descendants, spotlighting 10 Catholic churches in the Diocese of Scranton that were closed due to restructuring.

The churches are:

  • SACRED HEART, MAYFIELD
  • ST. ANTHONY OF PADUA, SCRANTON
  • ST. JOSEPH, SCRANTON
  • HOLY FAMILY, SCRANTON
  • ST. JOHN THE EVANGELIST, SCRANTON
  • ST. MARY OF THE ASSUMPTION, SCRANTON
  • ST. MARY CZESTOCHOWA, SCRANTON
  • ST. JOHN THE BAPTIST, TAYLOR
  • IMMACULATE CONCEPTION, TAYLOR
  • ST. MICHAEL, OLD FORGE 




The churches have rich ethnic heritages. They are Polish, Slovak, Italian, German, and Lithuanian parishes with long traditions and deep roots. Each church was founded by immigrant groups who came to the coal fields of the Lackawanna Valley with little more than their faith in God. Their churches served as the center of the community and touchstones of the Old Country. Framing Faith traces their histories from small beginnings through baptisms, weddings and funerals to their final celebrations. Throughout the text are images from each church, visual reminders of what was for many an important part of their lives.


— Nicole Langan

Tribute Books

P.O. Box 95

Archbald, PA  18403

Phone: 570-876-2416

Email: info@tribute-books.com

 Web Site: www.tribute-books.com

Another Childless Saint

Saint Catherine of Genoa

A pious and prayerful girl, she early felt a call to religious life, tried to enter a convent at age 13, was turned away because of her youth. At 16 she entered into an arranged marriage with a young Genoese nobleman, Giuliano Adorno. They were a childless couple, he was careless and unsuccessful as a husband and provider, often cruel, violent and unfaithful, and reduced them to bankruptcy. Catherine became indifferent to her faith, and fell into a depression.











Saint Catherine of Genoa

(1447-1510)

I consider all that befalls me, except sin, as coming from the hand of God.  Sin is mine alone just as is all concern with the self.   

— St. Catherine of Genoa




Let every suffering and pain be welcome that comes from God’s will, for you have illuminated me, O Lord, for the last thirty-six years or so. For your sake I have always sought to suffer, within as well as without.  And this desire has never let me suffer greatly.  On the contrary, all those things that I have undergone that seemed intense suffering were, because of your will, sweet and consoling.   

— St. Catherine of Genoa





PROMOTE THE CAUSE FOR Servant of God – ELISABETH LESEUR!

Today is actually in memory of Elisabeth as she is not yet a recognized saint.  So, we must promote her cause daily with our prayers and devotions.  Thank you for doing all that you can in honor of this holy woman!

Elisabeth 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.

 
 
Elisabeth Leseur 
Quotes from My Spirit Rejoices
“My present trial seems to me a somewhat painful one, and I have the humiliation of knowing how badly I bore it at first. I now want to accept and to carry this little cross joyfully, to carry it silently, with a smile in my heart and on my lips, in union with the Cross of Christ. My God, blessed be Thou; accept from me each day the embarrassment, inconvenience, and pain this misery causes me. May it become a prayer and an act of reparation.”
 
 
 
 

The cause for the CANONIZATIONof Elizabeth Leseur is being handled in Rome by:

Fr. Vito GomezPostulator Generalis
Curia Generalizia dei Padri Domenicani
Convento Santa Sabina (Aventino)
Piazza Pietro d’Illiria, 100153 Roma (Italia)
Telephone: (39) 6 57 941
Fax: (39) 6 57 50 675
e-mail: postulatore@curia.op.org


 

Update:

The contact information for the postulator’s office in Rome is no longer accurate. Brother Llewellyn Muscat, secretary to the Dominican Postulator, is now the primary contact person at the Vatican. For contact details, and an overview of the current status of the cause, I suggest the website

ELcause.org

It is maintained by Elisabeth Leseur’s Circle of Friends, a new non-profit group based in the United States who are trying to energize work to advance her cause.

 

May 3 ~ a little history of the Holy Cross

File:Feast of the Cross.jpg

In the Gallican usage, beginning about the seventh century, the Feast of the Cross was celebrated on May 3, and called “Crouchmas” (for “Cross Mass”) or “Roodmas“. When the Gallican and Roman practices were combined, the September date was assigned to commemorating the rescue of the Cross from the Sassanid Persians, and the May date was kept as the Finding of the Holy Cross or Invention of the True Cross to commemorate the finding. (In this context “invention” (from Latin invenire, “to find”) does not have the modern sense of creating something new.) Pope John XXIII removed this duplication in 1960, so that the Roman Calendar now celebrates the Holy Cross only on September 14.
May 3 is the date given in the Church of England‘s Book of Common Prayer liturgy, but the new Common Worship liturgy, following the Roman Catholic Church’s lead, celebrates Holy Cross Day on September 14.




Resource:  http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Feast_of_the_Cross

Elisabeth Leseur – Patron of the Infertile

Elisabeth and Felix Leseur in 1910.

Elisabeth and Me (1910)

By the time this volume appears, I shall have left the world, and entered the seminary.

My beloved wife, Elisabeth, prayed incessantly for my return to the Catholic Faith. Daily for this intention, she offered up all her sacrifices, trials, sufferings, and at the end,

even her death.

But she did this secretly, because when we married,

I was profoundly anti-religious. I had been raised Catholic

but lost my faith in medical school.

I searched for weapons against Catholicism. I set myself to attack Elizabeth’s Faith, to deprive her of it, and — may God pardon me! — I nearly succeeded.
Then, in 1913, she was struck by cancer, which for 10 months was her Calvary until she died, just 48 years old.

I have, since Elisabeth’s death, learned to appreciate the power of her silence. God heard the constant prayer it concealed, and completed the conversion begun in me by her influence and by my reading her Journal, which I found after her death, and which I present to you here.

It shows how Elisabeth endured terrible afflictions, comforted others, never complained, and looked to the Eucharist and to prayer and self-sacrifice, for the support she needed.

When I think that I was foolish and criminal enough 

to try to destroy the Faith that lifted her so high 

and sustained her so powerfully!

To what a Hell would I have reduced her 

and condemned myself at the same stroke!

A great many people attended her funeral. They expressed such real and unanimous emotion that the priests assisting at the service were utterly astonished: “Who was this woman? We have never seen such a funeral before!”

Elisabeth Leseur at home in Paris, 1910.
After Elisabeth’s death, when everything seemed to collapse around me, I came upon the Spiritual Testament 
she had written for me, and her Journal, too.
I read and reread them, and a revolution took place in me. There I discovered that Elisabeth had concluded with God a pact, vowing to exchange her life for my return to the Faith.
I remembered that one day she had told me
with absolute assurance: 

“I shall die before you.
And when I am dead,
you will be converted;
and when you are converted,
you will become a religious.
You will be Father Leseur.”

And so from her Journal I perceived clearly the inner meaning of Elisabeth’s existence, so grand in its humility. I came to appreciate the splendor of the faith of which I had seen such wonderful effects.
The eyes of my soul were opened. I turned toward God,
who called to me. I confessed my faults to a priest
and was reconciled to the Church.

Elisabeth had led me to the truth, and even today, in my inmost being, I continue to feel her guiding my steps
to a more perfect union with God.
Fr. Felix Leseur, c. 1940
Fr. Felix Leseur, O.P.(ca. 1940)

Elisabeth’s Journal is my daily reading.
It is a book of rare beauty. The designs of
God’s Providence are shown plainly in
Elisabeth’s life and work.
I am convinced that by reading these pages
many torn hearts will find the means
to endure with courage the sacrifices
which have been imposed on them.
I now, therefore, give to you
these precious pages:


The Secret Diary of Elisabeth Leseur (book cover).
I pray that the Holy Spirit will spread them
far and wide and that they may help to work
in as many souls as possible the renewal
they have accomplished in my own soul.
 Fr. Felix Leseur

* Felix’s words are adapted from In Memoriam,
his 1917 introduction to Elisabeth’s 
Journal et pensées de chaque jour.
   

                                   

The cause for the canonization of Elisabeth Leseur is being handled in Rome by:
Fr. Innocenzo Venchi, O.P.
Postulator Generalis
Curia Generalizia dei Padri Domenicani

Convento Santa Sabina (Aventino),
Piazza Pietro d’Illiria, 100153 Roma (Italia)
Telephone: (39) 6 57 941
Fax: (39) 6 57 50 675 
The Woman Whose Goodness
Changed Her Husband
from Atheist to Priest
 

336 pages pbk $19.95
1-800-888-9344
or send your check to:
Sophia Institute Press
Box 5284, Manchester, NH 03108

Walking in the Garden of God with Mary

Dear Little hearts,

Listen! Listen! in the Garden of God, the Spirit whispers through the trees…

Mary…. Mary….. Mary….how beautiful is the name of the Holy Mother of God! and whenever we speak, pray, look to Mary we are also speaking, praying, looking at Jesus, for never were two hearts so totally one as the hearts of Jesus and Mary! Think- reflect upon that in the silence of your own heart!

Mary has so many unclaimed graces in her hands, more numerous than the leaves upon the trees…. graces for the asking as she wants to draw you, bring you closer and closer to Jesus!

Lovingly, 

Poor Clare Colettines TMD




“Blessed is the man who loves thy name, O Mary,” exclaims St. Bonaventure. “Yes, truly blessed is he who loves thy sweet name, O Mother of God! for,” he continues, “thy name is so glorious and admirable, that no one who remembers it has any fears at the hour of death.” Such is its power, that none of those who invoke it at the hour of death fear the assaults of their enemies. St. Camillus de Lellis urged the members of his community to remind the dying often to utter the holy names of Jesus and Mary. Such was his custom when assisting people in their last hour.

Oh, that we may end our lives as did the Capuchin Father, Fulgentius of Ascoli, who expired singing, “O Mary, O Mary, the most beautiful of creatures! let us depart together.”

Let us conclude with the tender prayer of St. Bonaventure:

“I ask thee, O Mary, for the glory of thy name, to come and meet my soul when it is departing from this world, and to take it in thine arms.”  Amen

“Carry your cross with Patience and Hope”



I feel the need to share this scripture (below) that was placed on my heart while writing someone who asked a question about suffering.  

How do we accept suffering?  What are the answers in this journey?  


Answer:  Patience, deep cleansing breaths and reading/meditating on the WORD of God.


Sirach
Chapter 2

1
1 My son, when you come to serve the LORD, prepare yourself for trials.
2
Be sincere of heart and steadfast, undisturbed in time of adversity.
3
Cling to him, forsake him not; thus will your future be great.
4
Accept whatever befalls you, in crushing misfortune be patient;
5
For in fire gold is tested, and worthy men in the crucible of humiliation.
6
Trust God and he will help you; make straight your ways and hope in him.
7
You who fear the LORD, wait for his mercy, turn not away lest you fall.
8
You who fear the LORD, trust him, and your reward will not be lost.
9
You who fear the LORD, hope for good things, for lasting joy and mercy.
10
Study the generations long past and understand; has anyone hoped in the LORD and been disappointed? Has anyone persevered in his fear and been forsaken? has anyone called upon him and been rebuffed?
11
Compassionate and merciful is the LORD; he forgives sins, he saves in time of trouble.
12
2 Woe to craven hearts and drooping hands, to the sinner who treads a double path!
13
Woe to the faint of heart who trust not, who therefore will have no shelter!
14
Woe to you who have lost hope! what will you do at the visitation of the LORD?
15
Those who fear the LORD disobey not his words; those who love him keep his ways.
16
Those who fear the LORD seek to please him, those who love him are filled with his law.
17
Those who fear the LORD prepare their hearts and humble themselves before him.
18
Let us fall into the hands of the LORD and not into the hands of men, For equal to his majesty is the mercy that he shows.

Please know that WE are praying for YOU!