Archive for May, 2010

May 04 2010

The Act of Consecration to The Sacred Heart of Jesus and The Immaculate Heart of Mary


Lord Jesus Christ, we consecrate ourselves to You today – each one of us, and all of us together as a family. Your Sacred Heart, the heart of Your crucified and risen Body, is the ever-living source of mercy and grace, hope and love for all of us. We desire to pledge ourselves and our lives to You in return.

Teach us to be always united with You through Your Holy Spirit: in mind and heart, in all our thoughts, words, deeds, joys and sufferings. Grant that we may ever “know You more clearly, love You more dearly, and follow You more nearly.”

We wish to share in Your redeeming work in our world: that Your Father’s will may truly be done on earth as it is in heaven; that the “civilization of justice and love” may thus be built up in our land.

Heart of Jesus, help us to keep sin away from our lives. Help us to keep loving, serving and forgiving each other. Live in our hearts and in our homes always. Make us wholly Yours.

With Your Mother’s Immaculate Heart, we renew our consecration to Your Sacred Heart, for the ever greater glory of our Father in Heaven. Amen!

Jesus, Mary and Joseph, be with us and bless us now and at the hour of our death. Amen!


Instructions for Families to be Consecrated

1. As a family, pray one rosary and the prayer of consecration together before the June 13, 2010 consecration Mass.

2. Members of the family will sign their names below to express their intention and desire to be consecrated.

3. As a family, offer this form during the consecration Mass on June 13, 2010.

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May 04 2010

The Litany to the Sacred Heart of Jesus

Lord, have mercy
Lord, have mercy
Christ, have mercy
Christ, have mercy
Lord, have mercy
Lord, have mercy
Christ, hear us
Christ, hear us
Christ, graciously hear us
Christ, graciously hear us

God, the Father of Heaven, have mercy on us
God, the Son, Redeemer of the World, have mercy on us
God, the Holy Ghost, have mercy on us
Holy Trinity, one God, have mercy on us
Heart of Jesus, Son of the Eternal Father, have mercy on us
Heart of Jesus, formed in the womb of the Virgin Mother by the Holy Ghost
Heart of Jesus, united substantially with the word of God
Heart of Jesus, of infinite majesty
Heart of Jesus, holy temple of God
Heart of Jesus, tabernacle of the Most High
Heart of Jesus, house of God and gate of heaven
Heart of Jesus, glowing furnace of charity
Heart of Jesus, vessel of justice and love
Heart of Jesus, full of goodness and love
Heart of Jesus, abyss of all virtues
Heart of Jesus, most worthy of all praise
Heart of Jesus, king and center of all hearts
Heart of Jesus, in Whom are all the treasures of wisdom and knowledge
Heart of Jesus, in Whom dwelleth all the fullness of the Divinity
Heart of Jesus, in Whom the Father is well pleased
Heart of Jesus, of Whose fullness we have all received
Heart of Jesus, desire of the everlasting hills
Heart of Jesus, patient and rich in mercy
Heart of Jesus, rich to all who invoke Thee
Heart of Jesus, fount of life and holiness
Heart of Jesus, propitiation for our sins
Heart of Jesus, saturated with reviling
Heart of Jesus, crushed for our iniquities
Heart of Jesus, made obedient unto death
Heart of Jesus, pierced with a lance
Heart of Jesus, source of all consolation
Heart of Jesus, our life and resurrection
Heart of Jesus, our peace and reconciliation
Heart of Jesus, victim for our sins
Heart of Jesus, salvation of those who hope in Thee
Heart of Jesus, hope of those who die in Thee
Heart of Jesus, delight of all saints

Lamb of God, Who take away the sins of the world, spare us, O Lord.
Lamb of God, Who take away the sins of the world, graciously hear us, O Lord.
Lamb of God Who take away the sins of the world,  have mercy on us.

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May 03 2010

St. Philip, Apostle

Published by under Ave Maria

Saint Philip by Georges de La TourSt. Philip was of Bethsaida, in Galilee, and called by our Saviour to follow him the day after St. Peter and St. Andrew. He was at that time a married man, and had several daughters; but his being engaged in the married state hindered him not, as St. Chrysostom observes, from meditating continually on the law and the prophets, which disposed him for the important discovery of the Messias in the person of Jesus Christ, in obedience to whose command he forsook all to follow him, and became thenceforth the inseparable companion of his ministry and labors. Philip had no sooner discovered the Messias, than he was desirous to make his friend Nathanael a sharer in his happiness, saying to him: “We have found him of whom Moses in the law and the prophets did write”, that is, the Messias; “Jesus, the son of Joseph, of Nazareth.” Nathanael was not so ready to give his assent to this assertion of his friend, by reason that the supposed Messias was reported to be of Nazareth. Philip therefore desired him “to come” himself to Jesus “and see”; not doubting but, upon his personal acquaintance with the Son of God, he would be as much convinced of the truth as he was himself. Nathanael complied, and Jesus, seeing him approach, said, within his hearing: “Behold an Israelite indeed, in whom there is no guile.” Nathanael asked him, how he came to know him: Jesus repined: “Before Philip called thee, when thou wast under the fig-tree, I saw thee.” Nathanael, as two holy fathers explain the matter, calling to mind that the closeness of his retirement on that occasion was such, that no human creature could see him, owned him hereupon for the “Son of God”, and the “King of Israel”, or, in other words, the Messiah, foretold by Moses and the prophets. The marriage at Cana of Galilee happening three days after, to which Jesus and his disciples were invited, St. Philip was present at it with the rest. The year following, when our Lord formed the college of apostles, Philip was appointed one of that number, and from the several passages of the gospel, he appears to have been particularly dear to his divine Master. Thus, when Jesus was about to feed five thousand persons, who had followed him into the wilderness, for the greater evidence of the miracle, and for the trial of this apostle’s faith, Jesus proposed to him the difficulty of feeding the multitudes in that desolate place. And a little before our Saviour’s passion, certain Gentiles, desirous to see Christ, made their first address to Philip, and by him and St. Andrew obtained that favor. Our Saviour, in the discourse he made to his disciples immediately after his last supper, having promised them a more clear and perfect knowledge of his heavenly Father than they had had hitherto, St. Philip cried out, with a holy eagerness and impatience: “Lord, show us the Father, and it sufficeth us.” From which words our Saviour took occasion to inculcate afresh a steady belief of his divinity, and perfect equality with the Father, saying: “So long a time have I been with you”, (teaching you who I am both by my words and actions,) “and have you not known me?” (If you beheld me with the eyes of faith such as I really am, in seeing me you would see the Father also, because) “I am in the Father, and the Father is in me.”

After our Lord’s ascension the gospel was to be preached to the whole world by a few persons, who had been eye-witnesses of his miracles, and were enabled, by the power of the Holy Ghost, to confirm their testimony concerning him by doing the like wonderful works themselves. That this might be accomplished, it was necessary that the disciples should quickly disperse themselves into all parts of the world. St. Philip accordingly preached the gospel in the two Phrygias, as Theodoret and Eusebius assure us from undoubted monuments. St. Polycarp, who was only converted in the year 80, enjoyed his conversation for some time, consequently St. Philip must have lived to a very advanced age. It appears, from a passage of Polyerates, quoted by Eusebius, that he was buried at Hierapolis, in Phrygia, which city was indebted to his relies for its preservation by continual miracles, as is averred by the author of the sermon on the twelve apostles, attributed to St. Chrysostom. An arm of St. Philip was brought from Constantinople to Florence, in 1204, whereof we have an authentic history in the Bollandists. The Orientals keep his festival on the 14th of November; the Latins on the 1st of May, with St. James. His body is said to be in the church of SS. Philip and James, in Rome, which was dedicated to God under their name, in 560. The emperor Theodosius, in a vision, received from St. John the Evangelist, and St. Philip, the assurance of victory over the tyrant Eugenius, the morning before the battle, in 394, as Theodoret relates.

From St. Philip we must particularly learn an ardent love of God, and desire to see the Father. He asked only this favor, because this was his only desire. Is it ours? Do we feel it so perfect as to extinguish all inordinate earthly affections and desires in our breasts? Do we employ the proper means to attain to this happy disposition? To obtain it, let us employ the succor of this apostle’s prayers, and by disengaging our hearts from corruption and vanity, become, in desires and affections, citizens of heaven. The pilgrim soul sees herself a stranger here on earth, and discovers nothing in this desert place of her banishment hut an abyss of vanity, and subjects of compunction, grief, and fears. On the other side, looking up to God, she contemplates the magnificence and splendor of his kingdom, which will have no end; its peace, security, sanctity without stain, delights without sorrow, unchangeable and incomprehensible joys; and she cries out in a holy transport: “O joy surpassing all joys, and without which there is no true joy, when shall I possess you? O, sovereign good, discover to me some ray of thy beauty and of thy glory; may my heart be set on flame by thy love, and my soul languish and wade with desire to be united to thee, to behold thee face to face, to sing thy praises night and day, to drink of the plenty of thy house, and of the torrent of thy delights, to be forever confirmed in thy love, and in some measure transformed into thee!” Such a soul seeks to hide herself from the eyes of men, to live unknown to the world; and, in retirement and repose, to apply herself to prayer, all her thoughts being taken up in contemplating the glorious things which are said of the blessed city of her God. All worldly enjoyments and distractions are insupportable to her, and she finds no comfort in this place of banishment but in singing the praises of her God, in adoring and in doing always his will, and in the sweet sighs and tears with which she seeks him, and begs him to reign perfectly in her affections by his grace and love, and to draw her speedily to himself out of this Babylon, in which every object increases her affliction, and inflames her desire, seeming to say to her: “Where is thy God?”

from ewtn.com

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May 01 2010

Novena Prayer for the Nine Days Preceding the Philippine Elections

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In the name of the Father, of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit.
Glory to the Father, to the Son, and to the Holy Spirit. Amen. 

Father in heaven,
You wish us as Christians and citizens in our country
to strive to participate with our people,
fully and faithfully,
toward building up a society and a nation
whose social and political order is “founded on truth,
guided by justice,
realized in freedom,
flowering in peace.”
(Blessed John XXIII, Pacem in Terris). 

You remind us in the Scriptures,
that “Unless the Lord build the city,
they labor in vain who wish to raise it”;
that not in personal lives alone,
but in social and political strivings also,
“Without Me, you can do nothing.”
Without You, Lord,
we can not
deeply and lastingly
bring to realization
a true moral and spiritual renewal
in our land. 

We turn to You then, Lord,
at this crucial time
when our local and national elections are about to take place,
and we beg You,
for our people and our nation, and for ourselves: that You may enlighten our minds
and guide our consciences,
ever to place the common good
of our nation and our people,
especially the good of those
who are poor and have less in life,
above all other lesser interests; 

that those we vote for
will be those who will strive
to serve our people’s interests,
and not their own,
above everything else;
that they be those
who will seek to make Your Will and Your Purposes
truly present and operative
in the governance of our society
and in the working out
of true solidarity and peace among our people;
that they will be firmly dedicated
to the true Christian “culture of life”;
that they will never sacrifice truth and justice
to the pursuit of gain and their narrow self-interest
through lying, corruption and greed; 

that You may purify the spirit
in all those charged
with the due realization of these elections,
so that they will fulfill their tasks and duties
in total obedience to the laws of our land,
with complete integrity, honesty and transparency,
seeking only that the will of our people
and their free and rightful voice
may truly express Your voice for us. 

that the efforts of those
who for their own interests
seek to frustrate the full and honest exercise
of our people’s right and duty
in the electoral processes,
be thoroughly thwarted
by the vigilance, steadfastness and courage
of those who will uphold,
defend and guard our democracy
and our democratic freedoms
with conscience, integrity and all their rightful might. 

Heart of Jesus, pierced for our sakes,
at this crucial time in our history,
lead all our people
to the ways of truth and wisdom,
love, selflessness and self-sacrifice
which You gave us
as the law of our own living.
Be with us now,
Heart of our Savior, and have mercy on our people and our land. 

Immaculate Heart of Mary,
beloved mother of our people,
intercede for us with Your Son,
that we may fulfill our rights and duties
during these elections
with true purity of mind,
with conscience and courage.
Be with us, our Mother,
and pray for our people and our land. 

Our Father. Hail Mary. Glory be (3x) 


 

The following prayer, addressed to St. Michael the Archangel, to thwart the designs of people of bad will, is the prayer prescribed by Pope Leo XIII against the work of the evil spirits in the world. 

ST MICHAEL THE ARCHANGEL, defend us in battle; be our defense against the wickedness and snares of the devil.  May God rebuke him, we humbly pray. And to thou, O prince of the heavenly host, by the power of God, thrust into hell Satan and all the other evil spirits who prowl about the world seeking the ruin of souls.  AMEN.  (Pope Leo XIII)

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May 01 2010

Year of the Two Hearts Theme for May 2010

For the evangelization of media.
For the descent of the Holy Spirit in a New Pentecost.

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May 01 2010

Prayer Intentions for May 2010

Published by under Year for Priests

General Intention
That the shameful and monstrous commerce in human beings, Which sadly involves millions of women and children may be ended.

Mission Intention
That ordained ministers, religious women and men, and lay people involved in apostolic work may understand how to infuse missionary enthusiasm into the communities entrusted to their care.

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