Showing posts with label St. Faustina. Show all posts
Showing posts with label St. Faustina. Show all posts

Eucharistic Reflection - Come To The Throne of Mercy!

Jesus to St. Faustina:



"My child do you fear the God of mercy? My holiness does not prevent Me from being merciful. Behold, for you I have established a throne of mercy on earth - the tabernacle - and from this throne I desire to enter into your heart. I am not surrounded by a retinue or guards. You can come to Me at any moment, at any time; I want to speak to you and desire to grant you grace."

(From Divine Mercy In My Soul - Diary of St. M. Faustina Kowalska)


Eucharistic Reflection - Divine Prisoner of Love



(St.Agatha's, Canastota, NY)

“O Jesus, Divine Prisoner of Love, when I consider Your love and how You emptied Yourself for me, my senses deaden. You hide Your inconceivable majesty and lower Yourself to miserable me. O king of Glory, though You hide Your beauty, yet the eye of my soul rends the veil. I see the angelic choirs giving You honor without cease, and all the heavenly Powers praising You without cease, and without cease they are saying: Holy, Holy, Holy. 

Want To "Save a Soul Today"?

 
When was the last time the first thought that came into your mind as you got up to enjoy the gift of another day was “Let me save a soul today?” For most of us, my educated guess would be, either not recently or never.

 
Have you heard a homily within the past year urging you to pray for the salvation of your soul and/or the souls of your loved ones and friends?  - not so much.
 

Do you ever think of where the souls of the 6,815 people (as estimated by the CIA World Factbook) who die on average everyday in this country have gone? Probably not!
 

Odd (and troubling) isn’t it, that even though the primary mission of the Catholic Church is to save souls, we rarely hear or think about that subject?

 
To paraphrase the great wisdom of Servant of God Madeleine Delbrel: how then can we desire to be saved, if we do not know we are lost?

 
For lots of reasons, too many Catholics have become quite complacent or even unconcerned about their eternal residence or that of those they love. After all, we are all “good and decent folk” and our loving and merciful God is not going to send any of us to some eternal inferno forever. We are partially right but terribly incorrect as well: God does not send anyone to hell. Those who populate that Godless hole have chosen to be there by the way they chose to live their lives here – their way, rather then God’s.

 
So maybe it’s time for all of us to pay closer attention to the salvation of souls and actually do something that will help us and others avail ourselves of His mercy and occupy the heavenly mansions God wishes to give us.

 
Father Joseph Homick of the Contemplatives of St. Joseph in California thinks so. He wants to make a simple but powerful flyer, Save a Soul Today! available to anyone who wishes copies. E-mail him with your request at: savesouls2day@gmail.com.

 
Imagine how many souls could be saved, if everyone who reads this article tells their friends about it and then orders copies of this pamphlet from Father for their respective parishes! I am obtaining copies for my parish. Will you?

With the good Father’s permission, the content of his flyer (less the instructions on how to say the Chaplet, which are available on the link in the column to the right of this post) follows. Please read and share this widely:

Save a Soul Today!

Do you know that you can do something that can be a direct and immediate contribution to the salvation of souls? Jesus told St. Faustina some­thing of great value in this regard. (Since she is a canonized saint and her writings have received Church approval, it is worthy of belief, even though this is not on the same level as Scripture and Tradition.) At a certain moment Jesus said this: "Pray as much as you can for the dying... Be assured that the grace of eternal salvation for certain souls in their final moment depends upon Your prayer..." (Diary, #1777).

Eucharistic Reflection - Would A Stranger Know?

  "The Eucharist is alive. If a stranger who knew nothing about the Eucharist were to watch the way we receive, would he know...