"The hunger for love is much more difficult to remove than the hunger for bread."
"The hunger for love is much more difficult to remove than the hunger for bread."
Jesus Christ my God, I adore you and thank you for all the graces you have given me this day. I offer you my sleep and all the moments of this night, and I ask you to keep me from sin. I put myself within your sacred side and under the mantle of our Lady. Let your holy angels stand about me and keep me in peace. And let your blessing be upon me. Amen.
~By St. Alphonsus Liguori (1696-1787)
Video: Fr. Lang and Dr. Laurence Hemming assist in the Incensation of the Altar at the Magnificat in the Solemn Vespers of the Exultation of the Cross. Merton College Chapel, Oxford University. CIEL 2006 Conference. Note: Vespers is the Church's official Evening Prayer for each day in the Year. For a listing of each day's Vespers, consult a Breviary.
I'm sure you remember my several posts on Andrea Clark, the woman whose ventilator was scheduled to be removed because of the hospital's ethics committee. Thankfully, the hospital reversed its decision. However, Andrea Clark has just died following a long series of complications from an open heart surgery. I'm just thankful that her final days were peaceful and that she was able to receive the care she need up to the very end.Please pray for her soul.
Requiem æternam dona ei, Domine, et lux perpetua luceat ei. Requiescat in pace
Image Source: All Souls Day by William Bouguereau
Communion and contemplation belong together: a person cannot communicate with another person without knowing him. Love or friendship always carries within it an impulse of reverence, of adoration. Communicating with Christ therefore demands that we gaze on him, allow him to gaze on us, listen to him, get to know him. Adoration is simply the personal aspect of Communion.(Pope Benedict XVI)
Image Source: Wikipedia
Here is part of Pope Benedict XVI's midday address:
Dear Brothers and Sisters:
On this Fourth Sunday of Easter, Good Shepherd Sunday, in which the World Day of Prayer for Vocations is observed, I have had the joy of ordaining in St. Peter's Basilica 15 new priests of the Diocese of Rome.
Together with them, I think of all those that, in all parts of the world receive priestly ordination at the same time. In thanking the Lord for the gift of these new priests at the service of the Church, we put them in Mary's hands, while invoking her intercession so that the number will grow of those who accept Christ's invitation to follow him on the path of the priesthood and consecrated life.
This year, the theme of the World Day of Prayer for Vocations is "Vocation in the Mystery of the Church." In the message I have addressed to the entire ecclesial community for this occasion, I recalled the experience of Jesus' first disciples that, after meeting him on the lake and in the villages of Galilee, were captivated by his attractiveness and love.
The Christian vocation always implies renewing this personal friendship with Jesus Christ, which gives meaning to one's life and makes it available for the Kingdom of God.
The Church lives from this friendship, nourished by the word and the sacraments, holy realities entrusted in a particular way to the ministry of bishops, priests and deacons, consecrated by the sacrament of holy orders. For this reason, as I underlined in the same message, the mission of the priest is irreplaceable and, although in some regions there is a lack of clergy, there is no doubt that God continues to call adolescents, youths and adults to leave all to dedicate themselves to the preaching of the Gospel and the pastoral ministry.
© Copyright 2006 -- Libreria Editrice Vaticana [adapted]
Here is a link to a video from the Immaculate Heart of Mary Parish in Mass. It is a short video of the Holy Week celebrations from this parish, which celebrates the Tridentine Mass. I found the pictures stunning and the music angelic.Check it out!
I posted the other day how a person I know attacked Catholics for what he believed was our position against evolution. A reader asked me what is the exact beliefs of Catholic concerning evolution, so I thought it would be wise to examine how Catholicism and the theory of Charles Darwin fit together.
First, we as Catholics know that the universe was created out of nothingness (cf. Dei Filius, can. 2-4; Lateran Council IV). Some scientists claim that the universe was randomly created in what they call the Big Bang. Most people don't realize that the theory of the Big Bang was first conceived by a Belgian priest named Father Georges-Henri Lemaître although he did not give it the name "Big Bang". Yet this is one theory of the origin of the universe that has its own drawbacks in light of scientific discoveries (or lack thereof)
At Vatican I, the Church infallibly stated that everyone must "confess the world and all things which are contained in it, both spiritual and material, as regards their whole substance, have been produced by God from nothing" (Canons on God the Creator of All Things, canon 5). So, we do not believe the world was created in a random order without God's role.
The Church does not have a position on whether or not the stars and planets were created at the same time as the universe. However, when they were created they were also done so under the guidance of God. "By the word of the Lord the heavens were made, and all their host [stars, nebulae, planets] by the breath of his mouth" (Ps. 33:6). The Church has also infallibly stated that the universe is finite - it did not always exist. God alone is the only one that has always existed.
With biological evolution, the Church does not have a firm position on the matter, but again, the creation of all creatures is again attributed to God. No animal or plant life form developed without God's active guidance. He is the Creator.
Concerning human evolution, the Church is much more clear on its position. We must believe as an absolute truth that the human soul has never evolved and is never passed on from our parents. Our soul is unique to us, and the soul has never evolved. Also, it is an absolute truth that we have descended from one person - Adam, from whom Original Sin has been passed down to us. This must be believed.
Pope Pius XII wrote, "The Church does not forbid that...research and discussions, on the part of men experienced in both fields, take place with regard to the doctrine of evolution, in as far as it inquires into the origin of the human body as coming from pre-existent and living matter." (Encyclical Humani Generis)
Whatever is true regarding the origins of man is true only because God has willed it to be so. God is our Master and Our Creator. The world has come into being through Him, and that is the firm truth. We can learn about God from the created world.
In Encyclical Pascendi, Pope St. Pius X in 1907 condemned Modernism, which is based on Evolution. He called it the "synthesis of all heresies". St. Pius X also condemned the idea that the Faith must be subject to current views of Science and History.
Ludwig Ott in Fundamentals of Catholic Dogma stated the following points concerning science. These are all infallibly defined and consequently are true and must be believed by Catholics.
- All that exists outside God was, in its whole substance, produced out of nothing by God.
- God was moved by His Goodness to create the world.
- The world was created for the Glorification of God.
- The Three Divine Persons are one single, common Principle of the Creation.
- God created the world free from exterior compulsion and inner necessity.
- God has created a good world.
- The world had a beginning in time.
- God alone created the world.
- God keeps all created things in existence.
- God, through His Providence, protects and guides all that He has created.
Overall, the Church permits belief in special creation (the literal belief from the Book of Genesis) or in developmental creation, where God created us but we did evolve with the exceptions already mentioned above. The Church condemns belief in atheistic evolution, which claims God had no role in our creation. Atheistic evolution is a lie.
We above all can learn of God through the created world (Romans 1:20-23). If evolution is true, it is only true because God has willed it to be the method He used in the creation of the world.
"Spread love everywhere you go. Let no one ever come to you without leaving happier."
Padre Pio:
"Oh Mary, sweet Mother of priests, mediatrix and administratrix of all graces, from the bottom of my heart I beg and implore you to thank Jesus, the fruit of thy womb, today, tomorrow and forever. "
Thank you so much for your continued prayers for Father Mc Kenna. His attitude is great but he has not improved. He is allowed no visitors save the clergy and his immediate family. He has lost vision in his eye due to the radiation and the doctors are not encouraged at this point. He continues to send messages to all who pray for him that he appreciates their prayers and wishes for us to keep it up.
Bernadette
I am asking us to form a prayer group for Fr. McKenna. Please, if you can, say one Hail Mary each day for him. The Hail Mary is powerful as it is through Mary that we can reach the Heart of Jesus. Please just pray one Hail Mary a day for his health, and I know God will hear our prayers.
Writing concerning the Feastday of Our Lady of Lourdes, Dom Gueranger writes:
My bow shall appear in the clouds and I will remember My covenant with you. The lessons at Matins on February 11, 1854 (Thursday in Sexagesima week) recalled these words, and the world soon learned that on this very day Mary had appeared, more fair than the sign of hope which typified her at the time of the deluge.
During the year 1858, our Blessed Lady appeared eighteen times from February 11, 1858, to July 16, 1858, to Bernadette Soubirous, the fourteen-year-old daughter of a destitute day labourer of Lourdes in France. Through this humble child, the Mother of God announced to the world her sublime title of the Immaculate Conception and a special message of penance and love.
On March 25, 1858, the Virgin Mary appeared to St. Bernadette and said, "I am the Immaculate Conception." This occurred shortly after the declaration of Our Lady as Immaculate, and Church authorities were astonished that an uneducated child would know what it meant when it was not yet even readily taught. St. Bernadette died at the age of 35 on April 16, 1879. Her body remains incorrupt today.
The Church has officially approved these apparitions as authentic. A feastday in honour of Our Lady of Lourdes was approved by Pope Leo XIII and first granted to the Diocese of Tarbes in the year 1890. And Pope St. Pius X in 1907 extended the feastday of Our Lady of Lourdes to the entire Church to be celebrated on February 11th of each year.
Since the apparitions, countless people have journeyed to Lourdes, France to be healed in the waters of the Grotto where Mary appeared. Many of them have been healed. The process for healing to be declared a miracle is very intense but dozens of people have already been formally declared healed because of the miraculous water at Lourdes.
In February 2019, the 70th official healing was declared by the authorities. The French bishop Jacques Benoit-Gonnin of the Beauvais diocese declared that the 79-year-old nun, Sr. Bernadette Moriau, who was disabled for over 40 years, was miraculously healed by the waters of Lourdes.
In a video published on the diocese’s website, Sister Moriau declared that as she returned home after a pilgrimage to Lourdes, she heard a voice telling her to remove her leg braces. Immediately after that, she was able to walk on her own again. After a careful examination by physicians and experts, no earthly cause could explain her recovery. And similar stories have occurred for the other 69 approved miracles.
February 11 is therefore also World Day for the Sick.
O God, Who by the Immaculate Conception of the Virgin didst prepare a worthy dwelling for Thy Son: we humbly beseech Thee, that we, who celebrate the Apparition of this same Blessed Virgin, may obtain health of soul and body. Through our Lord.
Prayer Source: 1962 Roman Catholic Daily Missal
This past week it has been even more obvious to me that we as a society need to pray. It isn't just a hobby or a Sunday obligation. We need to pray each and everyday because the truth is that our world is sick. The world is suffering from hatred, prejudice, ignorance, and it doesn't realize that we are only falling into greater sin. I turned on the television this week and saw the suffering in the Sudan. All of this is caused by prejudice and hatred. And then I read a news article calling for greater abortion access in the Sudan claiming that would help the women. These people are worried about living, not about access to abortions! If we as a society would only open our hearts then we could save so many lives. By allowing the sin of abortion to enter the Sudan, we will only be distancing ourselves further from God.And, it's apparently obvious this is what people are doing. Look around - people are tolerating sin. Some people are leaving the truth of the Church for false religions. What's even sadder is seeing too many people falling victim into believing the greatest lie - the lie of atheism. It just hurts me so much that people are starting to forget Our Lord, who died for us on the Cross. He must be first! His sacred Hands, Feet, and Head were disfigured in the greatest expression of human life - God died for us. And still people refuse to accept the truth that we must live for Jesus. Not only did He create us and save us, but the entire world to come revolves around worshipping Christ. Christ must be the foundation of every society! Jesus Christ must reign above all of us, and every single one of our actions in the course of the day must bring glory to His name. The number of people around me that actually show their love for Christ each day can be counted on my right hand. Perhaps it's just my perspective and most keep their emotions inside. But, I know that there are many good people, and I know that by the grace of God, many of the ones in the slavery of sin can be brought into grace by our works and prayers. We need to pray for an end to abortion, violence, terrorism, and the condoning of any type of sin.
But, more than just praying, we must actually act! Earlier this week I heard someone talking about the Immaculate Conception refering to Christ. I had to tell her that the Immaculate Conception doesn't refer to Christ; it refers to Mary. But, what I do know, is that I will continue speaking and writing about Christ and His Church to dispel sin and lies for years to come. I hope many of you will also continue because we are making a difference! Many of my fellow Catholic bloggers are touching the lives of those in sin, and I thank you all for serving God as you do.
I received a very hopeful email yesterday from a former-Lutheran that said my writings helped bring her to the Sacrament of Confession. I couldn't help but to thank God for using me to bring this person to the truth. God is love - I just wish more people would realize this.
Image Source: Unknown, Believed to be in the Public Domain
Today is the second day of the Novena to Our Lady of Fatima. It will last from today through May 13th - the Memorial of Our Lady of Fatima. For more information concerning the approved apparitions of Mary in Fatima in 1917, please see my post on Our Lady of Fatima.Novena Prayer:
Most Holy Virgin, who has deigned to come to Fatima to reveal to the three little shepherds the treasures of graces hidden in the recitation of the Rosary, inspire our hearts with a sincere love of this devotion, so that by meditating on the mysteries of our redemption that are recalled in it, we may gather the fruits and obtain the conversion of sinners, the conversion of Russia, and this favor that I so earnestly seek.... (State your request here...) which I ask of you in this novena, for the greater glory of God, for your own honor, and for the good of all people. Amen
(Say the Our Father, Hail Mary, and Glory Be three times each)
Image Source: Believed to be in the Public Domain
Today K has posted the final day of the Novena to St. John Vianney for greater vocations to the priesthood. Several other Catholics have joined in this novena for me, and I thank you all earnestly for your cooperation.Image Source: Ordination Class of 1928, Believed to be in the Public Domain
"May Mary be the star which shines on your path, and May she show you the safe way to reach the Heavenly Father. May she be like an anchor to which you must be more closely attached in time of trial."Image Source: Assumption of Mary by Veronese

Novena Prayer:
Most Holy Virgin, who has deigned to come to Fatima to reveal to the three little shepherds the treasures of graces hidden in the recitation of the Rosary, inspire our hearts with a sincere love of this devotion, so that by meditating on the mysteries of our redemption that are recalled in it, we may gather the fruits and obtain the conversion of sinners, the conversion of Russia, and this favor that I so earnestly seek... (State your request here...) which I ask of you in this novena, for the greater glory of God, for your own honor, and for the good of all people. Amen
(Say the Our Father, Hail Mary, and Glory Be three times each)
Image Source: Believed to be in the Public Domain
Double of the II Class (1954 Calendar): May 11st Class Feast (1962 Calendar): May 11
Feast (1969 Calendar): May 3
St. Philip
St. Philip was one of the first disciples that Jesus called. Jesus said, "Follow Me" and Philip didn't ask questions. He knew the Lord and He followed. St. Philip didn't just use nice words, but rather, he acted and followed Jesus. Action is what is important.
"The next day Jesus was about to leave for Galilee, and He found Philip. And Jesus said to him: 'Follow Me'. Now Philip was from Bethsaida, the town of Andrew and Peter. Philip found Nathanael, and said to him: 'We have found Him of whom Moses in the Law and the Prophets wrote, Jesus the Son of Joseph of Nazareth'. And Nathanael said to him: 'Can anything good come out of Nazareth?' Philip said to him: 'Come and see'" (John 1:43). St. Philip suffered martyred in c. 80 AD at Hierapolis, Phrygia.
Patron: Hatters; Luxembourg; pastry chefs; Uruguay.
St. James the Lesser
He is called "the Lesser" simply to distinguish him from the other St. James. The other St. James is called "St. James the Greater" only because he was called by our Lord before this St. James. St. James the Lesser was a brother of the St. Jude the Apostle, and he would later write the Epistles of St. James, part of the New Testament. After the dispersion of the apostles, St. James was made the bishop of Jerusalem. St. James loved Jesus so much that he gave up his life. Because he refused to deny Christ's divinity, the Jews cast him down from a temple and clubbed him to death in c. 62 AD.
Traditional Matins Reading:
Patron: Apothecaries, druggists, dying people, fullers, hatmakers, hatters, milliners, pharmacists, Uruguay.
Prayer:
O God, Who dost gladden us by the yearly festival day of Thine Apostles Philip and James: grant, we beseech Thee, that we who rejoice in their merits, may be taught by their example. Through our Lord.
Prayer Source: 1962 Roman Catholic Daily Missal
From Andrea's sister:
How am I doing? I am doing FABULOUS! My sister, Andrea, is GETTING WELL. Her white blood cell count has been down to normal for the FOURTH day in a ROW now, and she has been able to get off of the blood pressure raising drugs that she has had to be on for MONTHS. She is doing GREAT. Her new doctor ... has also halved the amount of pain medications that she is taking, so that she can talk to her family. He says that her condition is "serious," but that she does have the ability to get much better.
The futility proceedings are stopped now. Because this new doctor took over her case, it is all stopped.
I'm so happy I don't know what to think, or say, or do. Not only is my sister NOT going to be put to death by St. Luke's Episcopal Hospital, but it also looks like she is RECOVERING from her heart surgery, finally.
Melanie
Our prayers and emails helped save this woman's life and now she was a chance.
From Andrea's attorney, Jerri Ward:
I want to let you know that St. Luke’s is doing the right thing in this case now. The physician team met with the new attending and it went well. The team is on board and the medical futility procedure has been stopped. For the time being, Andrea will continue to receive life-sustaining and appropriate treatment at St. Luke’s.
Quotations were from Pro-life Blogs
Update (May 9, 2006): Andrea Clark has died
Please pray the eighth day of this Novena, which is posted on K's blog. It is vitally important to pray for holy, traditional vocations to the priesthood and to religious life.Image Source: Unknown, Believed to be in the Public Domain

[The next night] I saw my Guardian Angel, who ordered me to follow him. In a moment I was in a misty place full of fire in which there was a great crowd of suffering souls. They were praying fervently, but to no avail, for themselves; only we can come to their aid. The flames which were burning them did not touch me at all. My Guardian Angel did not leave me for an instant. I asked these souls what their greatest suffering was. They answered me in one voice that their greatest torment was longing for God. (20)
Jesus, when I cannot sing You the hymn of love, I admire the singing of the Seraphim, they who are so dearly loved by You. I desire to drown myself in You as they do. (195)
When I went to the garden one afternoon, my Guardian Angel said to me, "Pray for the dying." And so I began at once to pray the rosary with the gardeners for the dying. (314)
As the sisters were making their vows, I heard angels singing in various tones, "Holy, Holy, Holy," with chanting so delightful that no human tongue could ever match it. (1111)
[I] asked Him to arrange it that no evil person would dare come to the gate (of the convent). Then I heard these words: My daughter, the moment you went to the gate I set a Cherub over it to guard it. Be at peace. After returning from my conversation with the Lord [in the Chapel] I saw a little white cloud and, in it, a Cherub with his hands joined. His gaze was like lightning, and I understood how the fire of God's love burns in that look.. (1271)
As I was meditating on the sin of the Angels and their immediate punishment, I asked Jesus why the Angels had been punished as soon as they had sinned. I heard a voice: Because of their profound knowledge of God. No person on earth, even though a great saint, has such knowledge of God as an Angel has. (1332)
When I entered the chapel for a moment, the Lord said to me, My daughter, help Me to save a certain dying sinner. Say the chaplet that I have taught you for him. When I began to say the chaplet, I saw the man dying in the midst of terrible torment and struggle. His Guardian Angel was defending him, but he was, as it were, powerless against the enormity of the soul's
misery. A multitude of devils was waiting for the soul. But while I was saying the chaplet, I saw Jesus just as He is depicted in the image. The rays which issued from Jesus' Heart enveloped the sick man, and the powers of darkness fled in panic. The sick man peacefully breathed his last. When I came to myself, I understood how very important the chaplet was for the dying. It appeases the anger of God. (1565)
When during adoration, I repeated the prayer, "Holy God" several times, a vivid presence of God suddenly swept over me, and I was caught up in spirit before the majesty of God. I saw how the Angels and the Saints of the Lord give glory to God. The glory of God is so great that I dare not try to describe it, because I would not be able to do so, and souls might think that what I have written is all there is. Saint Paul, I understand now why you did not want to describe heaven, but only said that eye has not seen, nor ear heard, nor has it entered into the heart of man what God has prepared for those who love him...Now I have seen the way in which I adore
God; oh how miserable it is! And what a tiny drop it is in comparison to that perfect heavenly glory. (1604)
Once, when a certain doubt rose within me shortly before Holy Communion, the Seraph with the Lord Jesus stood before me again. I asked the Lord Jesus, and not receiving an answer, I said to the Seraph, "Could you perhaps hear my confession?" And he answered me, "No spirit in heaven has that power." And at that moment, the Sacred Host rested on my lips. (1677)
Read more from the Diary of St. Faustina.
Disclosure of Material Connection: Some of the links on this blog are “affiliate links.” This means if you click on the link and purchase the item, I will receive an affiliate commission. As an Amazon Associate, for instance, I earn a small commission from qualifying purchases made by those who click on the Amazon affiliate links included on this website. I am disclosing this in accordance with the Federal Trade Commission’s 16 CFR, Part 255: “Guides Concerning the Use of Endorsements and Testimonials in Advertising.”
Support A Catholic Life. Your Patronage Helps Keep Us Updated and Online!
Become a Patron! Support Me On Patreon And Get Access to Exclusive Content, Free Catholic Books, Access to Discounts, and Much More!






