Friday, November 16, 2012

Feast of Our Lady of Ostra Brama (Mother of Mercy)

Shared by Mary Jane.


The history of Our Lady of the Dawn, who is also known as Our Lady of Ostra Brama, begins in 1386. In that year prince Jagellon of Lithuania married the Polish princess Jadwiga. She was the first to introduce Catholic practices in the Russian Orthodox kingdom. Even though the Orthodox of Lithuania venerated the Virgin in their liturgy and prayers, they were unfamiliar with the intensity of the Polish love and devotion for Mary. However, when it was first introduced by princes Jadwiga, the people of Lithuania welcomed it with open arms. Early in the fifteenth century, the new city walls of Vilnius were built. Above each of the gates the people of the town placed an image of the Blessed Virgin. About a century later, Carmelites took over one of the parish churches in the vicinity of the southeastern gate of the town. In the Lithuanian language this gate was commonly known as 'Auros Vartai' (the gate of dawn). The Polish speaking population knew it as 'Ostra Brama' (the sharp gate). The Carmelites are known for their special dedication to the Mother of Jesus. They took special care of the image that was placed above the gate near their church. When the army of Moscow set fire to the city of Vilnius in 1655, most of the town was destroyed in a fire that lasted seventeen days. However, the image above the Ostra Brama gate survived without any damage. This strongly encouraged the people’s devotion toward it and attracted many pilgrims from outside. Early in the eighteenth century there was yet another fire in Wilna. When the image survived once again, the Carmelite fathers built a special shrine chapel for it above the gate in 1706. Since that year, people come to this chapel daily to recite the litany of Loreto before the image. There are several things about the Virgin of the Gate of Dawn worth noting. One of the most unusual aspects are the crossed hands. In similar icons where Mary is depicted without the Child Jesus, she is normally in an oran position, the attitude of prayer, with arms and hands extended upward or towards Christ. Unusual too are the relatively large robe and veil. Since early Byzantine times, the Virgin has been depicted covered by a flowing floor length robe with a veil showing her hands, face, neck, and sometimes a small part of one ear. In the Ostra Brama icon though, the robe is unusually large. It can be said that the iconography of the image of Our Lady of Ostra Brama is Western, but with strong Eastern Orthodox influences. This is quite common in the Eastern European region, where there is often no clear division between Catholic and Orthodox Christian art. In 1927, after the renovation of the painting and the chapel, a formal ceremony was held in front of the Cathedral of Vilnius in which the icon was crowned. By a special command of Pope Pius XI, it was also given the title 'Mater Misericordiae' (Mother of Mercy). The chapel was renovated in 1931-1932. Since 1936 the Carmelites have been taking care of the shrine chapel again. During the Second World War, the Archbishop of Vilnius decided that the miraculous picture should stay in the town. During the Russian communist occupation of Lithuania the chapel of Ostra Brama remained open. The Mother of Mercy was a powerful symbol in the struggle for Polish and Lithuanian independence. Our Lady of Ostra Brama (Vilnius), Pray for Us!
 
Pope John Paul II Links Fatima to the Divine Mercy
http://iheartworks.wordpress.com/resources/devotion-to-the-divine-mercy/pope-john-paul-ii-links-fatimadivine-mercy/
From September 4th to the 10th, 1993, John Paul II took his apostolic mission to the three former Soviet Baltic republics, Lithuania, Latvia, and Estonia. It was a miracle – a word not commonly heard in these countries – that the head of the Catholic Church stood among Lithuanians on that September day in Vilnius, and knelt together with them before the miraculous icon of Our Lady of Mercy of Ostra Brama. Only after his consecration of Russia in 1984, was the Pope able to go on pilgrimage to countries of the former atheist empire, pray the rosary for peace, undertake acts of entrustment, and preach the mercy of God.
 
Mother of Mercy, Ostra Brama
When John Paul II knelt in prayer at the feet of Our Lady, Mother of Mercy, at her Sanctuary of Ostra Brama, his presence there in a remarkable way, linked the Message of Fatima with the Divine Mercy. He also thereby fulfilled both aspects of the words of the Angel to the children of Fatima in the second apparition in 1916: “The most holy Hearts of Jesus and Mary have designs of mercy upon you.”
Just five months before his visit to Vilnius, on Divine Mercy Sunday, April 18, 1993, the Pope had declared Blessed the Polish nun, Sister Faustina Kowalska, to whom Our Lord had revealed His Divine Mercy in the 1930s. When in September, 1993, the Holy Father knelt beneath the image of the Woman of the Apocalypse at Ostra Brama (and Our Lady’s intervention at Fatima is accepted by many authorities as a fulfillment of chapter 12 of the Apocalypse), he would certainly have recalled that the image of the Divine Mercy was painted in Vilnius, and was first exposed precisely in the shrine of the Mother of Mercy in Ostra Brama. Sister Faustina briefly describes this event on page 44 of her Diary.
The proclamation of God’s Mercy at the present time coincides distinctly with the proclamation of the Message of Fatima, for the Mother of God of Fatima is also the Mother of Mercy, Stella Orientis, the Patroness of the East. This became apparent at the meeting of John Paul II with two Polish priests of the Marian Fathers of the Immaculate Conception. In February, 1994, Father Adam Boniecki, MIC, Superior General of the Marian Fathers, and Fr. John Nicholas Rokosz, MIC, Superior of the Polish Province, had a private audience with the Pope and presented him with two books, the Russian version of Blessed Faustina Kowalska’s Diary and the extended Polish version of Fatima, Russia and Pope John Paul II (from which we cite this material). The Pope was very pleased with this gift – holding them in his hands he said, “Good. Let the people read them. Let them know who brought them their freedom.”
On Divine Mercy Sunday, April 10, 1994, the editor-in-chief of the Marian Fathers’ publishing house in Warsaw, Fr. Kazimierz Pek, MIC, distributed the first Russian copies of the Diary in Moscow to the people gathered in the Immaculate Conception of Mary church. Here is part of what he said in his homily:
“The Divine Mercy begins to be proclaimed in Russia just from here, from the church dedicated to Our Holy Mother, immaculately conceived. It flows from the throne of a Woman, whose Heart was ever immaculate, filled with joy, because she experienced that “from age to age his mercy extends to those who live in his presence.” And she, who lives in his presence, is inviting all of us to do the same –by experiencing the Divine Mercy in our lives. Mary’s Immaculate Heart begins to triumph today because you can expect real miracles where the Divine Mercy is venerated and when people trust in the Divine Mercy (iHeartworks emphasis)…The statue of Our Lady of Fatima…is a sign. Our Lady seems to be saying: “Let them read. Let them know who brought them their freedom.” This is a way to fulfill all the promises and plans God has for Russia…”
The connection between Fatima and the Divine Mercy was further emphasized by Fr. Rokosz in the homily he delivered in Stockbridge, Massachusetts on the same day of Divine Mercy, April 10, 1994. Referring to his meeting with the Pope in February, Fr. Rokosz said in his sermon:
Brothers and Sisters! do you realize what the Pope said? It is the Divine Mercy that freed the Soviet nations from the chains of Communism! And the further fate of these nations and even of the entire world depends on it. The Pope points out that the message of Fatima and Divine Mercy meet again. The history of the world is entering a new phase. This epoch, at the dawn of which we are living, is the epoch of Divine Mercy.
And, for further evidence of the connection between Fatima and Divine Mercy, we have Our Lady’s words of Divine Mercy given at Fatima.
As noted above, a year prior to Our Lady’s apparitions in 1917, the Angel appeared to the three seers . During the second apparitions, the Angel said to them, “Pray! Pray very much! The Hearts of Jesus and Mary have designs of mercy on you.”

In the third apparition, the Angel taught them the moving Trinitarian prayer of Eucharistic reparation (see below), which bears a noteworthy similarity to the prayer to the Eternal Father in the Divine Mercy chaplet (see Chaplet Prayers).
 
In July, 1917, Our Lady revealed God’s plan of mercy, to save the souls of poor sinners from going to hell by establishing in the world devotion to her Immaculate Heart. Participation in this merciful work of salvation is extended to all the faithful who comply with Our Lady’s requests for prayers, sacrifices and acts of reparation, and is one of the principle elements in the Fatima Message.
 
Finally, in the last apparition of Our Lady at Tuy on June 13, 1919, Sr. Lucia was granted a vision of the mystery of the Most Holy Trinity, in which “under the left arm of the cross, large letters, as if of crystal clear water ran down upon the altar, formed these words, “Grace and Mercy’. Our Lady then said to me: “The moment has come in which God asks the Holy Father, in union with all the Bishops of the world, to make the consecration of Russia to my Immaculate Heart, promising to save it by this means.” (Fatima in Lucia’s Own Words, 9th edition, page 235).
View Sr. Lucia’s vision Now!
Sister Lucia, Our Lady’s chosen instrument for the communication of these divine mysteries, herself commented: “Who better than this Immaculate Heart could have revealed to us the secrets of Divine Mercy?” (ibid., page 19).

Trinitarian Prayer of Eucharistic Reparation (Fatima)
“Most Holy Trinity -Father, Son, and Holy Spirit – I adore Thee profoundly. I offer Thee the most precious Body, Blood, Soul and Divinity of Jesus Christ, present in all the tabernacles of the world, in reparation for the outrages, sacrileges and indifferences whereby He is offended. And through the infinite merits of His Most Sacred Heart and the Immaculate Heart of Mary, I beg of Thee the conversion of poor sinners.”            
http://marian.org/mary/prayers/hailmary.php 

"Our Lady of Ostra Brama" (Our Lady of Mercy) is the patroness of the Marian Province in the United States.
.....................
When Bl. John Paul the Great visited Our Lady of Ostra Brama's image, he recited

this prayer: The Litany of Loreto

V. Lord, have mercy.
R. Christ have mercy.
V. Lord have mercy. Christ hear us.
R. 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 Spirit, have mercy on us. 
Holy Trinity, one God, have mercy on us.

Holy Mary, pray for us. 
Holy Mother of God, pray for us. 
Holy Virgin of Virgins, [etc.]
Mother of Christ,
Mother of divine grace,
Mother most pure,
Mother most chaste,
Mother inviolate,
Mother undefiled,
Mother most amiable,
Mother most admirable,
Mother of good Counsel,
Mother of our Creator,
Mother of our Savior,
Virgin most prudent,
Virgin most venerable,
Virgin most renowned,
Virgin most powerful,
Virgin most merciful,
Virgin most faithful,
Mirror of justice,
Seat of wisdom,
Cause of our joy,
Spiritual vessel,
Vessel of honor,
Singular vessel of devotion,
Mystical rose,
Tower of David,
Tower of ivory,
House of gold,
Ark of the covenant,
Gate of heaven,
Morning star,
Health of the sick,
Refuge of sinners,
Comforter of the afflicted,
Help of Christians,
Queen of Angels,
Queen of Patriarchs,
Queen of Prophets,
Queen of Apostles,
Queen of Martyrs,
Queen of Confessors,
Queen of Virgins,
Queen of all Saints,
Queen conceived without original sin,
Queen assumed into heaven,
Queen of the most holy Rosary,
Queen of families,
Queen of peace,

V. Lamb of God, Who takest away the sins of the world,
R. Spare us, O Lord. 
V. Lamb of God, Who takest away the sins of the world,
R. Graciously hear us, O Lord. 
V. Lamb of God, Who takest away the sins of the world,
Have mercy on us.

V. Pray for us, O holy Mother of God.
R. That we may be made worthy of the promises of Christ.

Let us pray. Grant, we beseech Thee, O Lord God, that we thy servants may enjoy perpetual health of mind and body, and by the glorious intercession of blessed Mary, ever Virgin, may we be freed from present sorrow, and rejoice in eternal happiness. Through Christ our Lord. R. Amen.

Saturday, November 10, 2012

Veteran's Day's Prayer


Picture source

Dear Lord Jesus Christ,
those whom we honor today
are examples of your words:
"Greater love than this no one has:
that he lay down his life for  his friends."
They gave up their lives in the defense of freedom
for their loved ones and t heir country.

Teach me to appreciate the virtue of patriotism-
a true and Christian love of country.
Let me love my country not to follow it blindly
but to make it the land of goodness
that it should be...

New Saint Joseph People's Prayer Book

Short Prayer to Our Lady for the Holy Souls

Picture source

Dear Blessed Mother,
please bring as many souls as possible to heaven today.

Friday, November 09, 2012

Daily Indulgenced Aspirations to the Sacred Heart


This holy card was shared by a friend.  It is very efficacious to the soul who offers up these aspirations as often as possible.


Merciful Jesus, I consecrate myself today and always to Thy Most Sacred Heart.
 
Most Sacred Heart of Jesus I implore, that I may ever love Thee more and more.
 
Most Sacred Heart of Jesus, I trust in Thee.
 
Most Sacred Heart of Jesus, have mercy on us!
 
Sacred Heart of Jesus, I believe in Thy love for me.
 
Jesus, meek and humble of heart, make my heart like unto Thine.
 
Sacred Heart of Jesus Thy Kingdom Come.
 
Most Sacred Heart of Jesus, convert sinners, save the dying, deliver the Holy Souls in Purgatory.


Thursday, November 08, 2012

Visit a Cathedral on Friday - plenary indulgence

Cathedral of Our Lady of Peace - Honolulu
Mahalo Mary Jane!

A plenary indulgence is granted to the faithful who visit a cathedral on the feast of the dedication of the Archbasilica of the Most Holy Saviour (November 9) and there recite an Our Father and the Creed. 
  
Requirements for obtaining a plenary indulgence: 
•  Do the work while in a state of grace, 
•  Receive Sacramental confession within 20 days of the work (several plenary 
indulgences may be earned per reception), 
•  Receive Eucharistic communion (one plenary indulgence may be earned per 
reception), 
•  Pray for the pope's intentions (Our Father and Hail Mary, or other appropriate 
prayer, is sufficient), 
•  Have no attachment to sin (even venial) - i.e., it is sufficient that the Christian 
makes an act of the will to love God and despise sin. 
 
Requirements for a partial indulgence: The work must be done while in a 
state of grace and with the general intention of earning an indulgence. 
 
Notes:
Only baptized persons in a state of grace who generally intend to do so may
earn indulgences.
Indulgences cannot be applied to the living, but only to the one doing the
work or to the dead.
Only one plenary indulgence per day can be earned (except for prayer at the
hour of one's own death).
Several partial indulgences can be earned during the same day.
If only part of a work with plenary indulgence attached is completed, a partial indulgence still obtains.
If the penance assigned in confession has indulgences attached, the one work
can satisfy both penance and indulgence.
Confessors may commute the work or the conditions if the penitent cannot
perform them due to legitimate obstacles.
In groups, indulgenced prayer must be recited by at least one member while
the others at least mentally follow the prayer.
If speech/hearing impairments make recitation impossible, mental expression
or reading of the prayer is sufficient.
For an indulgence attached to a particular day requiring a church visit, the
day begins at noon the day before and ends at midnight.

Help the Holy Souls and they will help you.

"Meeting Between Dante and Beatrice in Purgatory" by Andrea Pierini

Picture source

"Now who can be in more urgent need of our charity than the souls in Purgatory?  What hunger, or thirst, or dire sufferings on Earth can compare to their dreadful torments?  Neither the poor, nor the sick, nor the suffering, we see around us, have such an urgent need of our help.  Yet we find many goodhearted people who interest themselves in every other type of suffering, but alas, scarcely one who works for the Holy Souls.

Who can have more claim on us?  Among them too, there may be our mothers and fathers, our friends and near of kin.

When they are finally released from their pains and enjoy the beatitude of Heaven, far from forgetting their friends on earth  their gratitude knows no bounds.  Prostrate before the throne of God, they never cease to pray for those who help them.  By their prayers they shield their friends from many dangers and protect them from the evils that threaten them."

Prayer of St. Gertrude the Great

"Our Lord told St. Gertrude the Great, that the following prayer would release 1000 souls from Purgatory each time it is said."

O Eternal Father,
I offer Thee the Most Precious Blood
of Thy Divine Son, Jesus,
in union with the Masses said 
throughout the world today,
for all the Holy Souls in Purgatory,
for sinners everywhere, 
for sinners in the Universal Church,
for those in my own home and within my family.
Amen



Wednesday, November 07, 2012

Year of Faith - CATECHISMS AND CATECHISTS



by Brother John Samaha, S.M.

          As we begin the observe the Year of Faith marking the 20th anniversary of the publication if the Catechism of the Catholic Church,
it is helpful to examine the various meanings attached to the term “catechism” and “catechist” throughout past history.

          Long before the invention of the printing press in 1450, learning was passed on primarily by word of mouth.  Learning was an oral and aural experience. “Catechism” comes from an ancient Greek verb that means “to echo.”   A teaching would be explained or recited and the listener would be asked to “echo” it, or repeat it until it was learned.  This method of learning reached back to ancient times.  Even before the establishment of the Church, Jewish teachers in the Old Testament era had taught the Scriptures by asking the learner to repeat verses again and again. This was a common method of teaching and learning.

          With the development of the printing press the speak-and-echo method of catechesis was adapted to a question-and-answer approach that could be set in print.  The Church adopted this system, and it was successful.  This is evident in the influence of the catechisms authored by St. Peter Canisius (d. 1597) and St. Robert Bellarmine (d. 1621).

          On a deeper and more personal level, both catechist and catechized were expected to interiorize the truth being studied and
“echo” it in their personal lives by the faithful living of the lesson.  It is with this intent that the late Cardinal John Wright chose as his episcopal motto Resonare Jesum.  Echo Jesus!

Our Lady of Intercession for Poor Souls


Picture source

Shared by a friend.


   Most holy Mary, Our Lady of Intercession, your motherly
tenderness gathers in one embrace all the souls redeemed by the
Precious Blood of your Son Jesus. We come before your royal
throne with sadness in our hearts, but also with boundless
confidence in your intercession, as we remember those who have
gone before us. Death, which tore apart the bonds of earth, has
not destroyed the love that binds us to those who lived in the
same faith as we do.
       Mary, countless souls in that place of expiation await with
unspeakable anxiety the help of our prayers, and the merits of
our good works. Urged by the charity of Jesus Christ, we raise
our face and heart in prayer to you, merciful Mother of all the
faithful, in favor of those suffering souls. Make our prayers
effective, O Mary. Through your motherly intercession obtain
for them the power to move the Heart of Jesus, our Redeemer.
Let your matchless holiness supply the defects of our misery,
your love make good our weak affection, your power strengthen
our helplessness.
       Queen of heaven, grant that the burning desire of the souls
of the departed to be admitted to the Beatific Vision may soon
be satisfied. Mother, we pray to you especially for the souls of
our relatives, of priests, of those who were zealous in honoring
you, of those who did good to the souls of others, of those who
wept with them and for them and, finally, for the souls of those
who are forgotten. Grant that one day, when we are all reunited
in heaven, we may be able to rejoice in the possession of God, in
the happiness of your dear presence, in the company of all the
saints, thanking you forever for all the blessings you have
obtained for us, O Mother, our unfailing consolation. Amen.

Hail Mary (3 times).

Eternal rest grant unto them O Lord and let perpetual light shine
upon them. May the souls of the faithful departed through the
mercy of God rest in peace. Amen.

Mary, Mother of God and Mother of mercy, pray for us and for all
who have died in the embrace of the Lord. Holy Mary, our Lady
of Deliverance, pray for us and for the holy souls in purgatory.

FOR THE DYING
Most Merciful Jesus, lover of souls, I pray You, by the agony of
Your most Sacred Heart, and by the sorrows of Your Immaculate
Mother, to wash in Your Most Precious Blood, the sinners of
the world who are now in their agony, and who will die today.
Heart of Jesus, once in agony, have mercy on the dying.   Amen.
__._,_.___



Prayer For the Grace to be Merciful to Others


The following was shared by a friend.


 
I want to be completely transformed into Your Mercy and
to be Your living reflection, O Lord. May the greatest of all divine
attributes, that of Your unfathomable mercy, pass through my
heart and soul to my neighbor.
 
Help me, O Lord, that my eyes may be merciful, so that
I may never suspect or judge from appearances, but look for
what is beautiful in my neighbors' souls and come to their rescue.
 
Help me, that my ears may be merciful, so that I may give
heed to my neighbors' needs and not be indifferent to their pains
and moanings.
 
Help me, O Lord, that my tongue may be merciful, so that I
should never speak negatively of my neighbor, but have a word of
comfort and forgiveness for all.
 
Help me, O Lord, that my hands may be merciful and filled with
good deeds, so that I may do only good to my neighbors
and take upon myself the more difficult and toilsome tasks.
 
Help me, that my feet may be merciful, so that I may hurry to
assist my neighbor, overcoming my own fatigue and weariness. My
true rest is in the service of my neighbor.
 
Help me, O Lord, that my heart may be merciful so that I
myself may feel all the sufferings of my neighbor. I will refuse
my heart to no one, I will be sincere even with those who, I
know, will abuse my kindness. And I will lock myself up in
the most merciful Heart of Jesus. I will bear my own suffering in
silence. May Your Mercy, O Lord, rest upon me. (163)
 
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Imprimatur
 
Franciszek Cardinal Macharski
Kraków, Poland
August. 1, 1994
 
The Congregation of the Sisters of Our Lady of Mercy
ul, Siostry Faustyny 3/9, 30-420
Kraków, Poland

Tuesday, November 06, 2012

Chaplet for the Holy Souls

Picture source

Our Father, Hail Mary, Glory be.

On the large beads (or Our Father beads) say:

"O Holy Souls draw the fire of God's love into my soul, to REVEAL Jesus Crucified in me here on earth, rather than hereafter in Purgatory".

On the small beads (or Hail Mary Beads) say:

"Crucified Lord Jesus, have mercy on the souls in Purgatory".

At the end in place of the Hail Holy Queen, say three times:

"Glory be to the Father".

- Source:  Old prayer card.