It's "Worth Revisiting" Wednesday - The Eucharist and the Rosary - Our Spiritual Armament
Grotto at Notre Dame
(Photo©Michael Seagriff)
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Do yourself a favor- go there now (and every
Wednesday) and let these authors bless and challenge you in your Faith journey.
During the rest of each
week. visit Allison at Reconciled To You and
Elizabeth at Theology Is A Verb.
You will be pleased with what they share.
The Eucharist and the Rosary - Our Spiritual Armament
[What follows is a modification of an article I posted nearly two years ago. It seemed appropriate and timely to share it again.]
There are two devotions
close to my heart and vital for the future of our Church and for the
salvation of our souls - The Eucharist and the Rosary. May we rediscover
each day a deeper and more abiding reverence and love for the Blessed
Sacrament. May we also use this month - one which the Church dedicates
each year to the Blessed Mother - to experience and/or re-experience
the power and efficacy of this most beautiful prayer, for as Saint John Paul II taught us: "To recite the Rosary is nothing other than to
contemplate with Mary the face of Christ."
(Perpetual Adoration Chapel at Our Lady of the Holy Spirit Center, Norwod,,OH) |
One would be hard pressed to find a better example of the life-changing power of these two devotions than through the following story of one man's love for both.
From
the inception of the Adoration Chapel in our parish and without
interruption for nearly five years until a few days before his death,
this gentleman came every Saturday morning... He learned to pray the Rosary there. Oh, how he enjoyed praying the Rosary before the Blessed Sacrament!...He spent his last hour before the Blessed Sacrament with his wife five days before he passed away. He died at home surrounded by his loving family and on the feast day of Our Lady of the Rosary...
God does not promise those who love him a life here free of trials and tribulations. Time
before Him in the Blessed Sacrament or praying the Rosary do not
guaranty a struggle free life. But He does promise sufficient graces to
carry our daily crosses and eternity with Him for those who love Him.
Visits
before the Blessed Sacrament and frequent contemplative recitation of
the Rosary are joyful preludes to our face to face encounter with Our
Lord and His Blessed Mother in heaven. They
are vehicles through which we make reparation to Him, His Sacred Heart,
His Mother and her Immaculate Heart, for all those who have rejected
Him, do not love Him and who have mocked His most beloved Mother.
Through these devotions, He will transform us and use us to transform
others.
Through
Adoration we will gain a greater appreciation and love for the Mass,
for the reception of His Body and His Blood, and a clearer recognition
of our need for the Sacrament of Reconciliation. Through the daily
recitation of the mysteries of the Most Holy Rosary and the assistance
of our heavenly Mother, we will draw closer to her Son.
May I ask you the same question Father Francis Hudson, S.C.J. once posed to his parishioners in a one sentence homily he gave: “What if God loved you only as much as you loved Him?” Or maybe we should reflect on a challenge issued by Leon Bloy, a French novelist, essayist and poet: “If
you will look into your own heart in utter honesty, you must admit that
there is one and only one reason why you are not, even now, as saintly
as the primitive Christians: you do not wholly want to be.”
We are each called to be saints. Only saints get into heaven. Don’t panic! God will mold us into saints if we desire it. All
things are possible for Him. Start or restart the journey. Use and love
the tools He has given us – the Eucharist and the Rosary.