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Father Pavone: “It Was For This That Jesus Himself Died And Rose Again”

Posted in Catholicism In Culture, Issues by Brother Stephen
Jun 28 2010
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Here is the second installment of Father Frank Pavone’s series on how to pray to end abortion. Father Pavone is the National Director of Priests for Life and you can see his various commentaries on his YouTube page (here). You can see the see first in this series on the Real Catholic Blog, here.

According to Father Pavone:

“The Lord will destroy death forever!” This marvelous declaration from Isaiah 25:8 should sustain us daily in our pro-life efforts.

When we pray to end abortion, we are not just asking God to do us some favor or to grant a request. It’s much more momentous than that.

When we ask Him to end abortion, we are pleading for the fulfillment of the primary purpose of salvation history: the conquering of death. It was for this that Jesus Himself died and rose again; it is for this that every Church ministry exists.

Please watch the short video below (and the first one) and continue to pray for the end of abortion. I’ll post the third video in the near future. There are many tools that need to be used in the long and arduous task we have before us to end this horrid practice. Some we can do more readily than others and some are more practical than than others. But the one we must always put to use is prayer. (Feel free to share this link on other sites or e-mail to friends and family.)

Father Pavone: “When we ask Him to end abortion, we are pleading for the fulfillment of the primary purpose of salvation history.”

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Tagged as: abortion, Church ministry, Father Frank Pavone, Isaiah, Jesus, National Director of Priests, pray, Real Catholic Blog, YouTube

John Paul II: “We Acknowledge Ourselves As Sinners”

Posted in Devotions, Liturgical Seasons, Saints, Scripture by Brother Stephen
Feb 16 2010
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As Mardi Gras draws to a close and Ash Wednesday and Lent dawns, I looked for a fulfilling and inspirational commentary on the season. On the ZENIT site, I found this, from John Paul The Great. I think it will set the tone for a fulfilling spiritual journey this Lent, drawing you closer to Christ, and a better understanding of the season and your faith.

“We Acknowledge Ourselves As Sinners,” Says John Paul II

VATICAN CITY, MARCH 5, 2003 (Zenit.org).- Here is a translation of John Paul II’s address at today’s general audience, which he dedicated to the spirit of Ash Wednesday. Earlier he had proclaimed this a day of prayer and fasting for peace.

* * *

1. Today, Ash Wednesday, the liturgy addresses to all the faithful an intense invitation to conversion with the words of the apostle Paul: “We implore you on behalf of Christ, be reconciled to God” (2 Corinthians 5:20). Lent is the most propitious time, spiritually, to receive this exhortation, as it is a time of more intense prayer, of penance and of greater attention to the needs of brothers.

With today’s rite of the imposition of ashes, we acknowledge ourselves sinners, invoke the forgiveness of God, manifesting a sincere desire for conversion. Thus we begin an austere ascetic journey, which will lead us to the Easter triduum, heart of the liturgical year.

2. In keeping with the tradition of the Church, all the faithful are obliged today to abstain from meats and to fast, with the sole exception of those who are impeded for reasons of health or age. Fasting has great value in the life of Christians, it is a need of the spirit to relate better to God. In fact, the external aspects of fasting, though important, do not exhaust such a practice. Joined to it is a sincere desire for interior purification, willingness to obey the divine will, and thoughtful solidarity toward brothers, particularly the poorest.

There is, then, a close link between fasting and prayer. To pray is to listen to God and fasting favors this openness of heart.

3. While we enter in the time of Lent, we cannot but be conscious of the present international context, in which threatening tensions of war are agitated. It is necessary that everyone consciously assume responsibility and engage in a common effort to spare humanity another dramatic conflict. For this reason, I wanted today, Ash Wednesday, to be a day of prayer and fasting to implore for peace in the world. Above all, we must ask God for conversion of heart, in which every form of evil and every thrust toward sin is rooted; we must pray and fast for peaceful coexistence among peoples and nations.

At the beginning of our meeting we heard the encouraging words of the Prophet: “One nation shall not raise the sword against another, nor shall they train for war again” (Isaiah 2:4). And again: “They shall beat their swords into plowshares and their spears into pruning hooks” (Ibid.). Above the upheavals of history is the sovereign presence of God, who judges the choices of men. To him [who] “judge[s] between the nations” and “impose[s] terms on many peoples” (Ibid.) we turn our hearts to implore for a future of justice and peace for all. This thought should stimulate each one of us to continue in an incessant prayer and in energetic commitment to construct a world in which egoism gives way to solidarity and love.

4. I also wished to propose again the urgent invitation to conversion, penance and solidarity in the Message for Lent, made known a few days ago, whose theme is the beautiful phrase of the Acts of the Apostles: “It is more blessed to give than to receive” (see 20:35).

In fact, only by converting to this logic can a social order be constructed characterized not by a precarious balance of conflicting interests, but by a just and common search for the common good. Christians, as leaven, are called to live and spread a style of generosity in every realm of life, thus promoting the authentic moral and civil development of society. In this connection, I have written: “To deprive oneself not only of the superfluous, but even of something more to distribute it to those in need, contributes to that denial of self without which there is no authentic practice of Christian life” (No. 4: [daily] L’Osservatore Romano, Feb. 7, 2003, p. 5).

5. May this day of prayer and fasting for peace, with which we begin Lent, be translated in concrete gestures of reconciliation. From the family to the international realm, may each one feel and make himself co-responsible for the construction of peace. And the God of peace, who knows the intentions of the heart and calls his children peacemakers (see Matthew 5:9), will not be lacking in his recompense (see Matthew 6:4,6,18).

We entrust our wishes to the intercession of the Virgin Mary, Queen of the Rosary and Mother of Peace. May she take us by the hand and accompany us during the next 40 days toward Easter, to contemplate the Risen Lord.

I wish everyone a good and fruitful Lent!

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Tagged as: abstinence, Acts of the Apostles, Ash Wednesday, conversion of heart, Easter, Easter triduum, Isaiah, John Paul II, John Paul the Great, Lent, liturgical year, Mardi Gras, Matthew, Mother of Peace, penance, prayer and fasting, Queen of the Rosary, risen Lord, sin, tradition of the Church, Virgin Mary, ZENIT

 

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