Saint Katharine Drexel
by VP
Posted on Sunday March 02, 2025 at 11:00PM in Saints
Saint Katharine Drexel, Holy Name Cathedral, Raleigh NC ©CAPG
Saint Katharine Drexel in North Carolina
Quotes from Saint Katharine Drexel:
- "The patient and humble endurance of the Cross - whatever nature it may be- is the highest work we have to do."
- "Ours is the Spirit of the Eucharist, the total gift of self."
- "The Eucharist is the never ending sacrifice. It is the Sacrament of Love, the supreme love, the act of love."
- "My sweetest Joy is to be in the presence of Jesus in the Holy
Sacrament. I beg that when obliged to withdraw in body, I may leave my
heart before the Holy Sacrament. How I would miss Our Lord if He were to
be away from me by His presence in the Blessed Sacrament!"
"The opening chapter of the rule admirably defines this twofold purpose
of the life of a Sister of the Blessed Sacrament: "The object of the
Institute is the honor and service of Our Lord in the Blessed Sacrament.
The sisters admitted to this religious congregation, besides attending
particularly to their own perfection, which is the principal end of all
religious orders, shall, by an apostolate of prayer and work, zealously
endeavor to procure through Jesus in the Blessed Sacrament living
temples for His Divinity amongst the Indian and colored races. To attain
this end the sisters admitted to this religious congregation shall
consecrate themselves, body, soul and spirit, to the service of their
Eucharistic Lord by their twofold apostolate, and feel convinced that
even if they were to perform heroic acts of virtue, they would only be
doing their duty; that is, they would be conducting themselves as it is
meet and fitting for the honor of Him who has given Himself entirely to
them." (...)
Devotion to Jesus in the Holy Sacrament is the great central devotion of
the sisterhood. The rule says, "Jesus really present in the Holy
Eucharist shall be the constant object of their affection. They shall
often reflect, on the infinite charity displayed for us in that ever
adorable Sacrament, and by frequent visits every day, pay assiduous
court to their Heavenly Spouse on His throne of love, uniting their acts
of adoration, prayers and thanksgiving, to those of the angels who
continually attend Him in the tabernacle. In all their sufferings and
anxieties, in all their fears, afflictions and temptations, they shall
seek comfort and consolation at the foot of the altar. They shall endeavor to model themselves on the
gentleness, humility, obedience and annihilation of Jesus in the Blessed
Sacrament. The practical rule of their conduct should be, what does our
Lord Jesus Christ want of me at this moment? In this action is there
anything for His service, for His glory? What would our Lord do on such
or such an occasion?" (...)
"The Feast of the Purification following witnessed the opening of "Holy Providence House." In an incredibly short time the building was filled to its utmost capacity-one hundred and fifty children. The majority are girls, whom the sisters keep until their twenty-first year. The boys, when they have reached the age of twelve, are transferred to industrial or trade schools. The girls receive a good common-school education, the larger ones spend one-half day in school work, the other half in domestic employment. Some take a course in scientific dressmaking; the steam laundry instructs others in all the details of fine laundry work; while the bakery and cooking classes afford instruction to an equally large number. The aim is to give the girls a good, solid English education, and a thorough knowledge of all the branches of domestic economy." American Ecclesiastical Review
The Practice of Lent: Our Mother's Mind
by VP
Posted on Sunday March 02, 2025 at 11:00PM in Tradition
"Life is a duty, dare it;
Life is a burden, bear it;
Life is a thorn-crown, wear it,
Though it break your heart in twain,
Though the burden crush you down,
Close your lips and hide your pain,
First the cross and then the crown."
Why a Lentent Season? By Rev. Fr. Michael A. O'Reilly, Paulist Fathers"The practice of Lent is not today what it was in the past. The black fast common in the day of our fathers and grandfathers, would seem to our day and generation a burden too heavy to be borne: the rules of the fast have been lightened and dispensations are multiplied to fit the burden to the back of a people less physically strong than their forbears, living in a time of hurry and strain. In this the Church has acted as a tender Mother, solicitous for the bodies as well as the souls of her children.
But the Church is not alone a tender Mother: she is first and always a faithful Spouse. The law of Christ is her law, the words of Christ are her words; she would not subtract from them one iota, nor will she ever admit that her children cannot follow where He has led. Others may say that His words must not be taken literally; that His law cannot be rigorously applied in the struggle of our complex life; that no man can aspire to the Christ life. Not so, the Spouse of Christ, the Catholic Church. She knows and she believes that Christ is the Son of God, the Divine Word: that He is Eternal Truth Who can neither deceive nor be deceived: that He is Infinite Wisdom Whose commands are possible and Whose counsels are delightful. Has He not said: “Follow Me,” and “I am the Way, the Truth and the Life”?
Now the command to do penance was uttered by her Lord and Master in no uncertain terms: “Unless you do penance, you shall all likewise perish” (Luke xiii. 3-5). And again, after His resurrection, He built up the faltering faith of His disciples by asserting the necessity of His Passion and of the continuance of the work of penance: “It behooved Christ to suffer and to rise again from the dead the third day: that penance and remission of sins should be preached in His Name” (Luke xxiv. 46, 47). How, then, may we reconcile the mitigation of the fast and multiplied dispensations with the Church’s fidelity to the exact teaching of the Master? To find the answer we must penetrate more deeply the mind of our Mother; we must analyze more carefully the meaning of penance and study its purposes more attentively.
If we look into the mind of our Mother, we will find her always tender, often indulgent, but never weak: her aim is not to spoil, but to strengthen: to build up, not to tear down. What she concedes to the weakness of the body is not to enervate the soul but to provide it with a more virile temple, a more active co-partner in the following of Christ. If the external circumstances of penance are changed, it is only to stress more deeply the hidden significance of the inevitable divine law: “Unless you do penance, you shall all likewise perish.” Every year the Holy Spirit within her invites her children, most urgently, to turn aside from the busy marts of men and follow our Lord into the desert. Those whose strength permits them the privilege of sharing literally His fast, she warns that “the letter without the spirit is dead”; those whose weakness does not permit them that privilege, she reminds that they are not thereby excused. For them, too, is the ringing call of the Master: “Deny thyself, take up thy cross and follow Me,” and it may not be evaded: all may not fast with Christ but all must pray with Him in the desert, if they would not perish.
Now, then, as never before, perhaps, it becomes us to take stock of what Lent is to mean to us in practice, to enter more fully into the self-denials of prayer and acquire more truly the spirit of penance.
Only thus will we be really in touch with the mind of our Mother, faithful to the leading of the Holy Spirit of Love, and obedient to the behest of our Divine Savior and Model: “Be ye perfect.” For, as St. Paul reminds us, only “if we be dead with Him,” shall we “also live with Him” (2 Tim.
ii. 11).
Source: Lent In Practice, (The Spirit of Penance) by Father John Burke C.S.P.
St. Marinus of Caesarea, Martyr, A.D. about 272.
by VP
Posted on Sunday March 02, 2025 at 11:00PM in Saints
"He was an officer in the Roman army under Valerian. Being asked by the governor of Palestine if he was a Christian, he answered in the affirmative: whereupon the judge gave him three hours so consider whether he would abide by his answer, or recal it. The bishop of Cæsarea being informed of the affair, came to him, when he was withdrawn from the tribunal, and taking him by the hand, led him to the church. There, pointing to the sword which he wore, and then to the book of the gospels, he asked him which of the two he would choose. Marinus, without the least hesitation, stretched out his right hand, and laid hold of the sacred book. Upon which the bishop said: "Go, be constant, and doubt not but God will give thee strength." Being summoned again before the judge, he professed his faith with even greater resolution and alacrity than before, and was immediately led away and beheaded, losing his sword, but gaining the promise of the gospel.
To many Christians the like choice is now offered; and how great is the number of those, who for temporal interest forsake the gospel, transgressing all its maxims to make their own advantage? And what is their gain, when accounts are made up, when the loss of heaven is the fruit of their injustice? Follow a better rule. Hold the gospel in your hand, and go no further than you can carry this with you. If any advantage be offered, and the condition of the purchase is offending against the truth or justice of this sacred volume, renounce the proposal;
for this is giving heaven for earth, and eternity for a moment. Praise
God for his mercy to this his servant, who having the same infirm nature that we have, desirous of quiet, and averse to suffering, was so confirmed by the divine grace, as cheerfully to submit to persecution, and to offer himself a sacrifice for the glory of God's name, and in testimony of his truth." The Catholic Year by Fr. John Gother