CAPG's Blog 

Superstition

by VP


Posted on Sunday May 03, 2026 at 12:00AM in Sunday Sermons


File:Mozes toont de Tien Geboden.jpg

Ten Commandments

Thou shalt not have strange gods before me.”—Exod. XX. 2.

"There are some sinful practices forbidden in these words which it is well to consider to-day, beside fortune-telling and the observing of dreams and omens. These are the use of charms, and the consulting of spirits, or seeking of the truth from the dead.

First, then, with regard to charms, amulets, and the like. Christians are unfortunately to be found, even at the present day, who use, in a superstitious way, and it may be for sinful purposes, things which can have no natural power to accomplish the end desired, but must derive any efficacy which they can be supposed to have from the devil, whose aid is therefore implicitly invoked by those who possess such things. Let every one, then, understand that the use of these charms and amulets, though it might be even for a good object, as the preservation of one's life, is a great sin, and will bring a curse instead of a blessing on any one who perseveres in it. If any one, then, has any such object which he has been told will keep him from danger, give him success in his undertakings, or anything of that kind, let him cast it aside or burn it up without delay. Doubly sinful, of course, is it to keep or use such objects with the hope of working harm to others, or of exciting evil passions in them; and the sin will in no case be avoided by the absurd character of the things employed in this way.

"But how," it may be asked, "about holy things, such as relics, medals, Agnus Dei, gospels, scapulars, and the like? Surely you would not call it superstitious or sinful in any way to keep or wear such things as these, or to think that they might do us some good, not only spiritually but even in the temporal order?" No, you are right about this. It is not sinful even to ask for miracles by the aid of things like those, which are either sacred by their nature or by the blessing of the Church. And the reason why it is not sinful is very plain. It is because God is invoked by means of them, and that any favors which are obtained by them will be for His honor and glory. Still that this should be so, they must be used with piety and devotion. To wear a scapular, for instance, simply as a sort of charm, without any desire or intention of honoring the Blessed Virgin by it, or to invoke her aid to escape from sin, would be not only useless but highly displeasing to her Divine Son. Almost every one feels this; few dare to profane holy objects of this kind by such. use of them; those who have really given themselves up to the devil seldom try to protect themselves in his service by such means.

Well now, to pass to the other subject, that of consulting spirits, or seeking, as the Jewish law has it, the truth from the dead. You see it is no new thing, this spiritism, though the rapping and table-tipping business is rather a new form of it in these days. It has been and is still very common among us, though it may be losing ground somewhat lately. But I do not think that Catholics have at any time been much interested in it compared with some other people. With regard to the next life, we have our faith to instruct us and are not inclined so much as others to ask the spirit-rappers to give us information. But still many Catholics have gone to their meetings, and would have little scruple in going now, just, as they say, from curiosity. They think there is nothing in it; that it is only a more or less clever piece of jugglery. Now, in this they should understand that they are likely to be greatly mistaken. Jugglery and trickery it is sometimes, no doubt; but there is the gravest reason to suspect that in many cases the spirits actually have a hand in the matter. Not, it is true, the spirits of the departed who are invoked, but evil and lying spirits who personate them, and wish by information seeming to come from them to weaken or destroy our belief in the truth of revelation. It is, then, no joking matter, but a very serious and dangerous one, to put one's self in the power and under the influence of these spirits from hell; and this is what one who goes to these spiritual seances, as they are called, may probably do. Remember, then, to have nothing to do with them if you value your immortal soul." Fourth Sunday after Easter Five Minute Sermons by the Paulist Fathers, 1893

Resources:

Reiki:

Bishops’ new guidelines condemn Reiki therapy as ‘superstition’ (CNA)

Guidelines for evaluating Reiki and Alternative Therapy (USCCB)

Reiki, not for Catholics. Not now, not ever by Mary Ellen Barrett (Amazing Catechists)

Yoga

Yoga Isn’t an Exercise, it’s a Spiritual Practice: Why Catholics Shouldn’t Practice Yoga. Jenny Dubay (Missio Dei)

Demonic Possession from Yoga, Reiki, and the New Age with Adam Blai  (Divine Intimacy Radio)

Q. Crystal Energy and Healing Stones? My Catholic Life! A journey of personal conversion!

Can Shamanism Be Compatible With Christianity? (Women of Grace)

Intergenerational curses, sin, healing, Family Tree

‘Intergenerational healing’ has no basis in Catholic doctrine, Spanish bishops affirm (World Report)

Superstition! Healing Your Family Tree (Australian theologian, Fr Peter Joseph)

Korean Bishops Condemn 'Family Tree' Healing Practice (2007, UCANews)

Healing the family tree, ancestral curses debunked (2025, 

Sins Passed Through Generations (Fr. Hugh Barbour, O. Praem.)





How to Pray

by VP


Posted on Sunday May 03, 2026 at 12:00AM in Sunday Sermons


The Miraculous Draught of Fishes (La pêche miraculeuse) - James Tissot

"Launch out into the deep."—St. Luke v. 6.

"IN this account of the miraculous draught of fishes which we have just heard in the Gospel we see a striking illustration of what real prayer should be, and how it is rewarded. Suppose we devote these few moments this morning to the subject of Prayer.

We know that prayer is an absolute necessity of the spiritual life. We are strictly bound to pray, if we would save our souls. The manner and the matter of our prayers are, within certain limits, left to our own judgment. There are no conditions of length or place or time. Long prayers are not necessarily the best ones; on the contrary, the Publican said only seven words, and the Penitent Thief nine; and we have yet to hear of prayers more promptly efficacious. We need not come to church in order to have our prayers heard; God will hear us anywhere and any time—as He heard Jeremias in the mire, Ezechias on his bed of death, Daniel in the den of lions, the Three Children in the fiery furnace, Peter and Paul in prison... Note that our Lord first desired Peter to "thrust out a little from the land," and afterwards to 'launch out into the deep." So with our prayers. We must thrust out a little from the land—that is, from attachments and affections of earth, before we can fully launch ourselves into the deep of perfect spiritual union with God. Do we "thrust out from the land" when we pray? And have we Jesus Christ in the vessel of our heart when we make the launch? Our prayers, to be good for anything, should have four characteristics: they should be recollected, detached, definite, and persevering.

1. Before we begin to pray, we must place ourselves in God's presence. We must collect all the powers of our minds and hearts, and set them on the one supreme object. The Memory must be called away from every-day affairs, and used to furnish food for our meditation; the Understanding summoned from its ordinary musings on worldly things, to reason and reflect on what we pray for, and Whom we pray to; the Will steadily fixed on God--striving to conform itself to the divine will, producing affections and forming resolutions suitable to our present needs.

2. Without detachment there can be no recollection. We must thrust out from the land." And how can we do this if the vessel of our soul is moored to the shore by a thousand and one little cords of earthly desire, and worry and care, and anxiety and passion? All these cords must be cut away, and we must "launch out into the deep," if we would pray aright and have God's blessing in ourselves.

3. Let us have a clear, definite idea of what we are going to pray for. Vague, meaningless generalities are out of place in such a serious business. Let us make up our minds beforehand about what we want, and then pray for that. It will not profit us much to ask for all the Cardinal Virtues and allthe Gifts of the Holy Ghost at one time. It will be quite sufficient, and decidedly more profitable, to single out some one virtue of which we stand in special need, and make that the particular burden of our prayers and thoughts and efforts for weeks, and months and years, if necessary, until we gain it.

4. And this, after all, is the true test of a genuine prayer-perseverance. 'We have labored all the night, and have taken nothing; but at Thy word I will let down the net." "Never despair" is the Christian's motto. Never mind how long we may have labored and prayed in vain; never mind how weary the spirit, or how weak the flesh; never mind how little seems our progress and how far away the "mark of the prize of our supernal vocation." God will, as He has promised, finally and gloriously reward our perseverance. Him that overcometh I will give to eat of the tree of life, which is in the paradise of My God." Five minute Sermons for Sunday by the Paulist Fathers, 4th Sunday after Pentecost 1893



Finding of the Holy Cross.

by VP


Posted on Sunday May 03, 2026 at 12:00AM in Tradition


The Discovery of the True Cross and St. Helena, c.1745 - Giovanni Battista Tiepolo

The Discovery of the True Cross and St. Helena Giovanni Battista Tiepolo 1745

"A FESTIVAL in memory of that day, when St. Helen, mother of Constantine the Great, found the cross, on which our Blessed Saviour had suffered, in the year 326, after it had laid buried by the heathens 180 years. Adore Christ crucified, and give God thanks for the memory of His Passion, renewed in the miraculous discovery of His cross. Pray that you may be partaker of His sufferings, and through the merits of His Passion obtain all the divine helps necessary for your salvation.

Pray that you may effectually find the cross of Christ in your soul, by the sincere love of Him who was crucified, and the practice of those lessons, which he has taught you on the cross; by dying to the world and sin, and removing all those earthly and corrupt passions, by which the knowledge of Christ crucified has been so long hidden from your eyes.

Detest the wickedness of those infidels, who, to destroy the memory of Christ's passion, had erected a statue of Venus in the place where the cross had stood; and resolve not to imitate their sacrilegious impiety, by establishing in your heart the love of the world and its sinful pleasures, instead of the love of your crucified Redeemer.

It ought to be a principal business of all Christians, to find the cross of Christ; first by a firm act of faith, professing the belief of Christ crucified; that the second Person of the Blessed Trinity, consubstantial to His Father, was made man, and died on the cross, for the salvation of man.

Secondly, by an act of hope, placing their whole confidence in the merits of Christ's Passion, in virtue of which alone they are to have expectation of grace and glory. This they are to renew every day, as often as they repeat the creed; not running it over without attention, but accompanying what they say with express and lively acts of this their faith and hope, and reflecting on those great obligations, which this mercy of their redemption brings upon them.

Thirdly, they are to find the cross of Christ, by often making the sign of the cross; that as in this they are baptized, so by the same they may consecrate the day, and all the actions of it, to the honour of Christ crucified, and obtain His blessing on all that they do. It is therefore a good practice, and recommended by the primitive Christians, not only to begin and end the day with the sign of the cross, but to make the same at our going abroad, and returning home, at eating and drinking, at our prayers, in time of danger, in the beginning of any occupation, as often as we do perceive any passion growing upon us, or are assaulted with temptations. Thus we are taught by St. John Chrysostom, and other ancient fathers; that by this means, putting ourselves under the conduct of Christ, and desiring His assistance, we may experience the effect of His sufferings, and truly find the cross in that grace and protection, which our Redeemer has purchased for us. For it cannot be doubted, that if upon repeating this action, we as often renew our faith and hope in Christ, and at the same time raise up our hearts to Him with a dependence on Him, and confidence in His assistance, we shall find very good effects of it in abundance of heavenly succours.

Fourthly, Christians are to find the cross, by labouring to bring their hearts to the holy dispositions of Christ crucified. And this ought to be the principal part of this day's devotion; without which all the rest can be but of little advantage to us. For, however we profess a faith and hope in Christ, and by often making the sign of the cross, seem to be solicitous for His help; yet if we advance not so far, as to find the spirit and dispositions of the cross in our hearts, we cannot expect that the rest, without this, will avail us to salvation. Now, to find the spirit of the cross in our hearts, is to find there the humility of the cross, the patience of the cross, the charity of the cross, the resignation, the mortification, and self-denial of the cross, that is, of Christ crucified. And this cannot be, unless we make a vigorous opposition to all that corruption and perverseness, which is contrary to the spirit of the cross." The Catholic Year by Fr. John Gother


Priest's First Saturday

by VP


Posted on Saturday May 02, 2026 at 12:00AM in Priests' Saturday


Mary as Mother of Priests is in the Dominican Priory Church of the Holy Cross in Leicester. by Lawrence OP

"Listen to what our Holy Father, Pope Pius XI, says: " God in heaven and I on earth, we desire nothing more ardently than prayer and sacrifice for priests...Let us beg God that He may give holy priests! If we have this, all else will follow; but if this be wanting, all else will avail nothing." It was from this trend of thought that the idea of the Priest's Saturday" took its origin, which idea the Superior General of the Salvatorian Fathers placed before the Holy Father in special private audience on November 21, 1934. His Holiness was much pleased with the plan and said, in conclusion: "We heartily praise and bless the work....We repeat, the thing pleases Us, We praise and bless it heartily."

What is the plan?

The Priest's Saturday:

It is something quite simple and easy, yet immeasurable great in its results. You should make it a point to offer the Saturday after the First Friday of each month to your Savior, through the hands of Mary, the great mediatrix of all graces, for the sanctification of all the priests and students for the priesthood throughout the whole world. For this purpose you should give the Saturday wholly and entirely to Him, that is to say, Holy Mass, Holy Communion, all prayers, labors, sacrifices, joys and sorrows. Whatever you cannot do on this day (Holy Mass and Holy Communion) you ought to supply immediately on Sunday. So there is really nothing new for you to do. You merely offer up this Saturday (or even every Saturday or some other day) for the sanctification of priests. It is not a case of any sodality of fraternity or anything like that. Like the First Friday in honor of the Sacred Heart, the Priest's Saturday seeks to become something religiously observed by all the Catholics of the world.

(...) Concern about the holiness of priests is the concern of the Heart of the Divine Savior and of His blessed Mother. Therefore, you also should be sure to take part in this "apostolate to the apostles. " The Holy Father, all bishops, all priests, all students for the priesthood, and especially also your own pastor, earnestly beg of you thus to participate."

Source: Priest's Saturday Series, #2 Prayers and Devotions for Priest's Day. used with permission

Priests' First Saturday

Divine Savior, Jesus Christ, Who hast entrusted the whole work of Thy redemption, the welfare and salvation of the world, to priests as Thy representatives, through the hands of Thy most holy Mother and for the sanctification of Thy priests and candidates for the priesthood I offer Thee this present day wholly and entirely, with all its prayers, works, sacrifices, joys, and sorrows.

Give truly holy priests who, inflamed with the fire of Thy divine love, seek nothing but Thy greater glory and the salvation of our souls.

And thou, Mary, good Mother of priests, protect all priests in the dangers of their holy vocation and, with the loving hand of a Mother, also lead back to the Good Shepherd those poor priests who have become unfaithful to their exalted vocation and have gone astray. Amen

In addition to the above make it a point also to recite frequently the following:
Divine Savior, Jesus Christ, Who Hast entrusted the weal and woes of Thy Holy Church to priests, with all the fervor of my heart I recommend to Thee the wants of my pastor and all priests. Enrich them more and more with true priestly sanctity. Give them generous, all embracing, apostolic hearts, full of love for Thee and for all Thy souls, so that they, being themselves sanctified in Thee, may sanctify us who are confided to their care, and may lead us safely to heaven. Bestow upon them in rich abundance all Thy priestly graces!
Let them ever give us a glowing example of love and fidelity towards Holy Mother Church, towards the Pope, and bishops, and grant that by word and example they may shine as models of every virtue.
Most loving Jesus, bless all their priestly labors and sacrifices! Bless all their prayers and words at the altar and in the confessional, in the pulpit, and in school, in confraternities, and at the bedside of the sick!
Protect and preserve them in all dangers from within and from without.
Divine Savior, give to Thy Church priests who abound in true holiness! Call many good boys and young men to the priestly and religious state! Aid and sanctify all those who are to become Thy priests! And to the souls of departed priests grant everlasting rest.
But to me give a true spirit of faith and humble obedience, in order that in my pastor I may ever behold the representative of God and willingly follow all his teachings. Amen 

Priestsʼ Saturday Series by the Salvatorian Fathers, 1945 Capg


St. Athanasius, Patriarch of Alexandria, Doctor of the Church, A.D. 373.

by VP


Posted on Saturday May 02, 2026 at 12:00AM in Saints


Saint Athanasius. By Francesco Bartolozzi after Domenichino.

"ST. ATHANASIUS governed the Church of Alexandria fortysix years, eminent for sanctity, and for his zeal in defence of the Catholic faith. Pray for all the prelates of Christ's Church, that in virtue and zeal they may follow the steps of this holy bishop, and not let vice or errors grow up, through their neglect. Pray likewise for that unhappy people of Alexandria, who having renounced their faith in Christ, have for so many ages been disciples of Mahomet. Pray for all Christian nations, that they may not draw down the like judgment on their heads, by their wickedness, and have their contempt of God's law punished with a general blindness.

St. Athanasius suffered the persecution of many years from the malice of the Arians, by whose false accusations he was often forced into banishment, and obliged to the confinement of caves for shelter against their wicked designs. It is almost impossible to conceive the storms that were raised against him, and with how many calamities he was oppressed: and it is difficult to apprehend that great constancy and truly Christian courage, with which he stood out to the end under such variety of evils; over all which he triumphed by zeal and patience, and at length ended his days in peace, dying in his bed at Alexandria, in the year 373, under the Emperor Valens.

Pray for a like courage under all trials; and remember that virtue is no security against persecution. Happy are you, if you have no other persecutions, but what virtue draws upon you. If you desire to be proof against the greatest storms, practice your courage in those lesser ones which daily happen. See that ordinary contradictions destroy not your inward peace, nor put you on making complaints, or unnecessary apologies in your own defence, much less on engaging in contentions on this account. It is much better to be unconcerned at these petty oppositions, than solicitous about them; for such solicitude is but the argument of your impatience and self-love. Thus prepare for greater trials, and call in God to your assistance." The Catholic Year by Rev. Fr. John Gother

Letter 19: "6. Like these too, are the heretics, who, having fallen from true discernment, dare to invent to themselves atheism. "For the fool says in his heart, There is no God. They are corrupt, and become abominable in their doings." Of such as are fools in their thoughts, the actions are wicked, as He says, "can you, being evil, speak good things (Matthew 12:34);" for they were evil, because they thought wickedness. Or how can those do just acts, whose minds are set upon fraud? Or how shall he love, who is prepared beforehand to hate? How shall he be merciful, who is bent upon the love of money? How shall he be chaste, who looks upon a woman to lust after her? "For from the heart proceed evil thoughts, fornications, adulteries, murders. "By them the fool is wrecked, as by the waves of the sea, being led away and enticed by his fleshly pleasures; for this stands written, "'All flesh of fools is greatly tempest-tossed." While he associates with folly, he is tossed by a tempest, and perishes, as Solomon says in the Proverbs, "The fool and he who lacks understanding shall perish together, and shall leave their wealth to strangers." Now they suffer such things, because there is not among them one sound of mind to guide them. For where there is sagacity, there the Word, who is the Pilot of souls, is with the vessel; "for he that has understanding shall possess guidance ;" but they who are without guidance fall like the leaves. Who has so completely fallen away as Hymenæus and Philetus, who held evil opinions respecting the resurrection, and concerning faith in it suffered shipwreck? And Judas being a traitor, fell away from the Pilot, and perished with the Jews. But the disciples since they were wise, and therefore remained with the Lord, although the sea was agitated, and the ship covered with the waves, for there was a storm, and the wind was contrary, yet fell not away. For they awoke the Word, Who was sailing with them , and immediately the sea became smooth at the command of its Lord, and they were saved. They became preachers and teachers at the same time; relating the miracles of our Saviour, and teaching us also to imitate their example. These things were written on our account and for our profit, so that through these signs we may acknowledge the Lord Who wrought them." Source: New Advent, Letter 19, St. Athanasius


    

THE SYMBOL, or Creed of St. Athanasius:

WHOSOEVER will be saved: before all things it is necessary that he hold the Catholic Faith.

Which Faith, except everyone shall have kept whole and inviolate, without doubt he shall perish everlastingly.

Now the Catholic Faith is this: that we worship one God in Trinity, and Trinity in Unity.

Neither confounding the Persons, nor dividing the substance.

For there is one Person of the Father, another of the Son, and another of the Holy Ghost.

But the Godhead of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost, is one: the glory equal, the majesty co-eternal.

Such as the Father is, such is the Son, and such is the Holy Ghost.

The Father is uncreated, the Son uncreated, and the Holy Ghost uncreated.

The Father is incomprehensible, the Son is incomprehensible, and the Holy Ghost is incomprehensible. The Father is eternal, the Son is eternal, and the Holy

Ghost is eternal.

And yet they are not three Eternals, but One Eternal.

As neither are there three Uncreated, nor three Incomprehensibles; but One Uncreated, and One Incomprehensible.

In like manner the Father is Almighty, the Son is Almighty, and the Holy Ghost is Almighty.

And yet they are not three Almighties, but one Almighty.

So the Father is God, the Son is God, and the Holy Ghost is God; and yet they are not three Gods, but One God.

So likewise the Father is Lord, the Son is Lord, and the Holy Ghost is Lord; and yet they are not three Lords, but One Lord.

For like as we are compelled by the Christian truth to acknowledge every Person severally to be God and Lord:

So we are forbidden by the Catholic religion to say there are three Gods, or three Lords.

The Father is made of no one, neither created, nor begotten.

The Son is of the Father alone: not made, nor created, but begotten.

The Holy Ghost is of the Father and of the Son, not made, nor created, nor begotten, but Proceeding.

So there is One Father, not three Fathers; One Son, not three Sons; and One Holy Ghost, not three Holy Ghosts.

And in this Trinity there is nothing before or after, nothing greater or less; but the whole three Persons are Co-eternal together, and Co-equal.

So that in all things, as is aforesaid: the Unity is to be worshiped in Trinity, and the Trinity in Unity. He, therefore, who will be saved, must thus think of the Trinity.

Furthermore, it is necessary to everlasting salvation, that he also believe rightly the incarnation of our Lord Jesus Christ.

Now, the right faith is, that we believe and confess : that our Lord Jesus Christ, the Son of God, is both God and Man.

He is God of the substance of His Father, begotten before the world; and He is Man of the substance of His Mother, born in the world:

Perfect God and Perfect Man; subsisting of a rational soul and human flesh

Equal to the Father according to his Godhead; and less than the Father according to his Manhood.

Who, although He be both God and man, yet He is not two, but One Christ.

One, not by the conversion of the Godhead into flesh, but by the taking of the manhood into God.

One altogether, not by confusion of Substance, but by unity of Person.

For as the rational soul and the body is one man, so God and Man is One Christ.

Who suffered for our salvation; descended into hell; rose again the third day from the dead;

He ascended into heaven; sitteth at the right hand of God the Father Almighty; from thence He shall come to judge the living and the dead.

At whose coming all men shall rise again with their bodies, and shall give an account of their own works. And they that have done good shall go into life

everlasting ting; but they that have done evil, into everlasting fire.

This is the Catholic Faith, which, except everyone shall have firmly and faithfully believed, he cannot be saved.

Glory be to the Father, &c.

The Augustinian Prayer Manual, 1882, p 321




Month of May: Blessed Virgin Mary

by VP


Posted on Friday May 01, 2026 at 02:00AM in Monthly Devotion


May: Month of the Blessed Virgin Mary

Virtue: Meekness

Our Lady of North Carolina, Sacred Heart Catholic Church, Downton Raleigh NC


Our Lady of North Carolina, increase the ranks of our priests by inspiring our young men to be more generous in their response to serve Our Blessed Lord in the priesthood and in religious life. Amen.


Saint Peregrine of Laziosi, Servite (1265-1345)

by VP


Posted on Friday May 01, 2026 at 12:00AM in Saints


St. Peregrine by Giacomo Zampa 

Prayers to St. Peregrine

"St. Peregrine Laziosi was born at Forli, on the first of May, 1265. In his youth he proved a noble and valiant knight, but a fierce enemy of the Church and the Pope. As his townsmen rebelled against the Pope, he became one of the boldest leaders of the revolution. But the Blessed Virgin to whom, notwithstanding his evil-doing, he had ever preserved a special devotion, watched over him.

It happened that St. Philip Benizi, the fifth General of the Order of the Servants of Mary, came to Forli at the command of the Sovereign Pontiff, to bring back that city to the obedience of the Holy See. But this dutiful son of the Church was cruelly treated by the rebels. Peregrine, more daring than the rest, not only insulted St. Philip, but even went so far as to strike him. But this great Saint meekly bore the injury and, in imitation of St. Stephen the first holy martyr, prayed fervently for his persecutors.

At the sight of so genuine a humility and charity, Peregrine, overcome with grief, ran in search of the Saint whom he had offended and humbly asked his pardon. St. Philip received the lowly penitent and assured him of pardon. He then exhorted him to change his life and to place himself under the protection of the most holy Mother of God, the better to carry out his good resolutions.

Henceforth Peregrine was changed into another man; but as he did not know what state of life he ought to embrace, he prayed fervently to Our Lady that she would herself deign to direct his steps in the way that God willed. The divine Mother heard his entreaties, and one day, as he was praying before her statue, she said to him: "Go to Siena to my Servants and there thou shalt find the way of salvation." Peregrine obeyed and, going out of the city, he found a young man dressed as a traveler, who offered himself as guide. When they arrived in Siena at the door of the Servite monastery, the young man suddenly disappeared, and Peregrine knew that he was an angel sent to guide him on his way.

The penitent received the Servite habit from the hand of St. Philip himself. Together with this outward habit, he also appeared clothed with the spirit of religious perfection. So great was his penance, that for thirty years he was not seen to sit down. His patience also in bearing infirmities was truly extraordinary, so that never a word of complaint was heard to come from his lips. Finally he died full of merits on the first of May, 1345, at the advanced age of eighty years." The Fairest Flower of Paradise: Considerations on the Litany of the Blessed Virgin Mary By Abbé Alexis Henri Marie Lépicier 1922


by Charles Kegan Paul

From the Breviary

GREAT the virtues which he showed,
He whose brow with glory glowed
When God's Mother gave him grace
'Mid her own to find his place.

To the Cross he firmly clung,
Wept the wounds that Jesus wrung;
Mary's sorrows fired his heart
Till he shared her bitter smart.

Herald he of words that win
Hardened sinners back from sin;
Robber bands he drew by love,
Suppliants of Heaven above.

Did the poor his bounty crave?
Largess beyond hope he gave ;
For as once at Jesus' touch
Scanty food was turned to much.

He, whatever pains oppressed,
Never laid him down to rest;
Standing, fasting, worked for God,
Bruised his body with the rod. 

When his limb in peril stood,
Christ in pity from the Rood
Reached His hand, and all the wound
Healed, the flesh grew sweet and sound. 

Glory, laud, and honour be

To Three in One and One in Three :
May His Servant aid to bring
Us to heaven to see the King.



Saint Joseph The Worker

by VP


Posted on Friday May 01, 2026 at 12:00AM in Tradition


Prayer to St. Joseph Patron and Protector of the Universal Church

Blessed be the Divine Providence of God, who in this age of trials has appointed the great St. Joseph Patron of the Universal Church. Infinite praise, honor, glory and thanksgiving, at every moment, from every creature, and for all eternity, be to Jesus, who is ever with His Church, and protects her in every trial and in every necessity.
Foster-father Joseph, our guide, protect us and holy Church.
O most holy Patriarch St. Joseph, ever protect the holy Church of Jesus; humble her enemies, confound their wisdom, and defeat their plots. O great St. Joseph! obtain from Jesus, for His Church, holy Popes, holy prelates, holy priests, and holy religious. Amen. Very Rev. Archdeacon Thomas Kinane

    • May 1, 1955 Pope Pius XII : "Yes, beloved workers, the Pope and the Church cannot withdraw from the divine mission of guiding, protecting, and loving especially the suffering, who are all the more dear the more they are in need of defence and help, whether they be workers or other children of the people.This duty and obligation We, the Vicar of Christ, desire to declare again clearly here on this first day of May, which the world of labor has claimed for itself as its own proper feast day. We intend that all may recognize the dignity of labor, and that this dignity may be the motive in founding the social order and the law founded on the equitable distribution of rights and duties. Acclaimed in this way by Christian workers and having received, as it were, Christian baptism, the first of May - far from being an incitation to discord, hate, and violence - is and will be a recurring invitation to modern society to accomplish what is still lacking for social peace; a Christian feast, therefore, that is a day of rejoicing for the concrete and progressive triumph of the Christian ideals of the great family of all who labor.

      In order that this meaning may remain in your minds and that in some way We may make an immediate return for the many and precious gifts brought to Us from all parts  of Italy, We are happy to announce to you Our determination to institute-as We in fact do now institute the liturgical feast of St. Joseph the Worker, assigning it to the first day of May. Are you pleased with this Our gift, beloved workers? We are certain that you are, because the humble workman of Nazareth not only personifies before God and the Church the dignity of the man who works with his hands, but he is always the provident guardian of you and your families." 


    "From the very Beginning, for great work, the Almighty has usually selected weak instruments to carry out His designs; and hence the candid observer must attribute the success, not to human wisdom or power, but to God alone. In this spirit the Redeemer chose for the first preachers of His Gospel twelve fishermen, without leaning, power, eloquence, or wealth; and their mission was to storm the citadel of paganism, to refute the most learned, eloquent, and subtle philosophers, and to proclaim to a sensual, selfish, and proud world the hard doctrines of chastity, self-denial, and humility. To set the world on fire with the love of the Sacred Heart of Jesus, God chose Margaret Mary, a weak, timid nun, hidden and buried in her cloister at Paray-le-Monial. To give examples would be to write the history of the Church; to narrate the spread of the Gospel in every country, to describe the origin and progress of every new Devotion; and to record the battles and victories of the Church in every age, over heresy, sin, and schism. In all great works, as St. Paul says, "the foolish things of the world hath God chosen that He may confound the wise, and the weak things of the world hath God chosen that He may confound the strong. And the base things of the world, and the things that are contemptible hath God chosen, and things that are not, that He might bring to nought things that are. That no flesh should glory in His sight." (1 Cor. i.27).

    Signal and speedy, no doubt, will be the victories of the Church in these her days of sore and bitter trials and persecutions; since God in His infinite wisdom has given her St. Joseph as a Protector and Patron.

    As St. Joseph guarded Jesus in His Divine Infancy, from the hands of His enemies, so will our great Saint protect the Church, the Spouse of Jesus, from her adversaries.
    To an age in revolt against lawful authority, and puffed up with a spirit of independence and inquiry, the Church holds up St. Joseph as a model of perfect obedience and resignation, without murmur or hesitation, to God's holy will. To an age devoured by love of wealth and riches, St. Joseph is a model of holy poverty, ministering with joy and happiness to the wants of Jesus and Mary, by the labour of his hands. To an age corrupt and wallowing in sensual pleasures, the Church presents St. Joseph as a model of perfect continency and holy purity. To an age enslaved by ambition for honours, applause, glory, and high station, the Church presents St. Joseph, the noble descendant of the royal house of David, hidden and unknown, as well as happy and contented, in his workshop at Nazareth. To all Christians St. Joseph is a perfect model of simple faith in the most sublime mysteries; of prompt obedience to the calls of Divine Providence; of perfect resignation in all things to God's holy will; of immaculate purity of souls and body; of a laborious and holy life; and of a happy death in the arms of Jesus and Mary. "Foster-father Joseph, our guide, protect us and the holy Church."  Source: St. Joseph : his life, his virtues, his privileges, his power : a month of March in his honour by Very Rev. Archdeacon Thomas Kinane, 1884.


    First Friday: Prayer to the Sacred Heart for Priests

    by VP


    Posted on Friday May 01, 2026 at 12:00AM in Prayers


    Sacred Heart Stained Glass, Raleigh NC

    Remember, O most loving Heart of Jesus, that they for whom I pray are those for whom You prayed so earnestly the night before Your death. These are they to whom You look to continue with You in Your sorrows when others forsake You, who share Your griefs and have inherited your persecutions, according to Your word: That the servant is not greater than his Lord.

    Remember, O Heart of Jesus, that they are the objects of the worldʼs hatred and Satanʼs deadliest snares. Keep them then, 0 Jesus, in the safe citadel of Your Sacred Heart and there let them be sanctified in truth.

    May they be one with you and one among themselves, and grant that multitudes may be brought through their word to believe in You and love You. Amen.

    Source: CAPG


    #13 Acts of Adoration Jesus Christ in the Blessed Sacrament in reparation for all the offenses committed against Him by mankind [Adoration of the Blessed Sacrament]

    by VP


    Posted on Thursday April 30, 2026 at 01:00AM in Thursday Reparation



    13. We adore Thee, most tender and most amiable of all Fathers! And to make reparation for the errors and infidelities of Thy own children, we offer up to Thee the faith of the Apostles. Eternal praise and thanksgiving be to the Most Holy and Most Divine Sacrament.

    O Queen of heaven and earth, hope of mankind, who adores thy Divine Son incessantly! We entreat thee, that, since we have the honor to be of the number of thy children, thou would interest thyself in our behalf and make satisfaction for us, and in our name, to our Eternal Judge, by rendering to Him the duties which we ourselves are incapable of performing. Amen

    CAPG