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#st francis chaplet
deklo · 3 months
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May we see the saint chaplets? :))
yes!! ♡
st anthony + st francis:
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st christopher:
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st dymphna:
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<333
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karmazain · 2 years
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St. Francis of Assisi chaplet with custom pendant for a client's pet. Want a custom chaplet, rosary, or necklace? Hit me up! I'll be able to take on some new commissions at the start of 2023. Reference pics of previous pieces available at website. Link in bio. #chaplet #rosary #stfrancisofassisi #catholicconjure #rootworkersofinstagram #conjureartist #spiritualjewelry #esoterichandmade #seraphinstation #bigluckyhoodoo #karmazain #folkcatholicism #alldogsgotoheaven https://www.instagram.com/p/CmhcUyWPfk6/?igshid=NGJjMDIxMWI=
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truedevotiondesign · 6 years
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Happy All Saints Day!
Today is the last day to get 10% off all saint chaplets!
Don't forget to go to Mass today!
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authorofemotion · 2 years
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how to explain to people that holy words or images will get you nowhere if you don’t use it to bolster your spirit in prayer
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traumacatholic · 3 years
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How to pray The Chaplet of Saint Michael 
The Chaplet of St. Michael is a wonderful way to honor this great Archangel along with the other nine Choirs of Angels. What do we mean by Choirs? It seems that God has created various orders of Angels. Sacred Scripture distinguishes nine such groupings: Seraphim, Cherubim, Thrones, Dominations, Powers, Virtues, Principalities, Archangels and Angels (Isa. 6: 2; Gen. 3: 24; Col. 1: 16; Eph. 1: 21; Rom. 8: 38). There may be more groupings but these are the only ones that have been revealed to us. The Seraphim is believed to be the highest Choir, the most intimately united to God, while the Angelic Choir is the lowest.
The history of this Chaplet goes back to a devout Servant of God, Antonia d'Astonac, who had a vision of St. Michael. He told Antonia to honor him by nine salutations to the nine Choirs of Angels. St. Michael promised that whoever would practice this devotion in his honor would have, when approaching Holy Communion, an escort of nine angels chosen from each of the nine Choirs. In addition, for those who would recite the Chaplet daily, he promised his continual assistance and that of all the holy angels during life, and after death deliverance from purgatory for themselves and their relations.
The salutations are each of the numbered texts. On the first salutation bead, you would pray “By the intercession of St. Michael and the celestial Choir of Seraphim may the Lord make us worthy to burn with the fire of perfect charity. Amen.” before going into the Our Father: 
“Our Father, Who art in heaven, Hallowed be Thy Name. Thy Kingdom come. Thy Will be done, on earth as it is in Heaven.Give us this day our daily bread. And forgive us our trespasses, as we forgive those who trespass against us. And lead us not into temptation, but deliver us from evil. Amen.“
Then on the second salutation bead you would pray the second one, and so on and so forth.
The Hail Mary is
“Hail Mary full of Grace, the Lord is with thee. Blessed are thou amongst women and blessed is the fruit of thy womb Jesus. Holy Mary Mother of God, pray for us sinners now and at the hour of our death Amen.“
You can find a nice and brief explanation of the Hail Mary here or you can read Pope Francis’ line by line explanation here. A guide to prayer and the Hail  Mary is also available in the Catechism of the Catholic Church - available online for free.
You absolutely don’t need a physical Rosary or Chaplet to pray this. You can use your fingers or some free apps like Laudate have interactive rosaries and chaplets so you can pray. 
If you’re interested in learning how to pray the Holy Rosary, then I have guides to praying each of the mysteries: Joyful Mysteries, Luminous Mysteries, Sorrowful Mysteries, Glorious Mysteries
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pamphletstoinspire · 4 years
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The Chotki: Our Forgotten Prayer Beads
The rosary takes fifteen minutes. Morning and evening prayer take maybe ten to twelve minutes each. The Divine Mercy Chaplet takes no more than seven minutes. Added up, I recently realized the sum total of my daily prayer life was only about forty-five minutes.
That didn’t settle very well with me. I wasn’t even giving God one hour of prayer each day? Something had to be done. And the remedy came in a set of prayer beads, but not in the form of our beloved rosary.
Referred to as “chotki” in Russian, or “komboskini” in Greek, a common name for these beaded or knotted devotional tools is the “prayer rope,” upon which the Jesus Prayer is prayed. Prayed by Christians before the sixth century, the Jesus Prayer varies slightly, but it is structurally based on Christ’s parable of the petition of the Publican who beats his breast and begs God for mercy, accusing himself as a sinful man.
The Jesus Prayer
The Jesus Prayer is “O Lord, Jesus Christ, Son of God, have mercy on me, a sinner.”
Albeit brief, this prayer does a number of important things. First, it recognizes and honors the Holy Name of Jesus. For those struggling with the sin of taking the Lord’s Name in vain, this prayer is a means of addressing that through loving reverence as opposed to disrespect.
Secondly, it identifies Jesus as the Lord, and, by association, Savior of the one praying. Thirdly, this prayer confesses Jesus Christ as the Son of God. Fourthly, and very importantly in this Jubilee Year, the prayer begs for mercy by confessing our sinfulness. The Jesus Prayer on the lips of the dying who are breathing out their last prayers is powerful, indeed. Which means it is a prayer of mercy for all of us.
A chotki may commonly have 33, 50 or up to 100 knotted cords or beads. The knots can be tied into complicated knots. It takes somewhere between 2-6 hours to tie a knotted chotki. Some monks have chotkis with 500 knots or cords. Some come with little tassels on the end, purportedly used by some to wipe away their tears of either penitence or joy.
One story from antiquity tells of a monk who used to tie simply knotted chotkis and then a demon who would untie the knots to frustrate the monk and suppress the devotion. As the story goes, his guardian angel appeared to the monk and taught him how to tie the knots in the form of a cross. The demon was unable to untie the knots from then on.
Chotkis are largely recognized as the prayer beads used by Eastern Rite Catholics as well as Eastern Orthodox, from whom the Latin Rite split by the eleventh century. But that means Christians were praying the Jesus Prayer for five hundred or more years preceding the Great Schism. And whereas Eastern Rite or Eastern Orthodox typically don’t pray the rosary, we Roman Catholics typically don’t pray with the chotki. But in asking why that is the case, a number of interesting factors came to light.
Pope Francis has been photographed wearing a chotki on his left wrist, traditionally, the preferred wrist for this devotion in the east. This way it keeps the right hand free to make the frequent Sign of the Cross in the Orthodox tradition. Additionally, Pope Francis has concelebrated the Eastern Rite Divine Liturgy as Archbishop Jorge Mario Bergolio. If he wears a chotki, he must, one would think, pray it. And why wouldn’t he pray it? It is scriptural. It is Christocentric. It is a prayer of both worship and petition. And it is a prayer of and for mercy.
My wife bought me a 100 bead chotki at our local Catholic book store. And I purchased another from St. Meinrad Monastery in Indiana. So if Roman Catholic institutions make chotkis available for purchase among the faithful, why wouldn’t we want to look into praying the Jesus Prayer with them?
The Jesus Prayer has been endorsed by St. John Chrysostom himself. Spiritual masters have advised praying this prayer constantly, dividing up the prayer in half with inhaling and exhaling. As we breathe in we pray, “O Lord, Jesus Christ, Son of God,” and as we breathe out we pray, “Have mercy on me, a sinner.” Ultimately, the goal is to make the Jesus Prayer “the prayer of the heart,” prayed throughout the waking hours of the day so often that it becomes psychologically present at all times. Some Greek Orthodox monks pray it 12,000 times each day.
It is an extraordinarily peaceful and meditative experience to increase the quality and quantity of one’s prayer life. And it is nothing to work up to praying the Jesus Prayer a couple hundred times every day.
Sure, I could pray an extra rosary, and sometimes I do. But several laps around the chotki give me the rich, prayerful fifteen minutes I was looking for.
BY: DAVID LA MAR
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roseslaces · 4 years
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So, funny thing just happened.
For the past several months I have been suffering such violent doubts that I have been on the point of loosing my faith. Not for any good reason, you see, just that those little doubts and what if's won't shut up.
Then, this afternoon at about four my brothers cat escaped when I was watching her. What's worse is that I didn't realize that she was gone until an hour ago, ten o'clock, since she very often hides somewhere I still haven't figured out to sleep for a few hours. My brothers searched the neighbourhood while went through my apartment with a fine tooth comb. Again. Just in case.
Then the amazing thing happened. I gave up looking and figured I'd be more useful on my knees. So I knelt down and, after caling on St Francis and St Anthony for help, I prayed a chaplet to Our Lady of Perpetual Succur and an express novena.
Not even five minuters later my brother showed up with the cat in his arms.
She was gone for six hours. We looked for her for an hour.
And he found her five minuters after I stopped praying.
Coincidence? Probably. But then, they do say that coincidence is what God uses when he wants to be anonymous.
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autumnhobbit · 5 years
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for instance:
today while I was wandering around the vendor booths set up in the yard like twenty feet from the wall of my building, this older gentleman falls over right next to me. I’m kinda like ‘uhh what do i do’ internally, but he asks for help getting up so I take one hand and another older gentleman comes over and takes the other and we pull him back to his feet. I hand him his hat back—it’s a Pope Francis hat. He thanks me and asks if I’m interested in a really good dinner this evening.
I know what he’s talking about because a few weeks ago, when my brother was in an appliance shop down here trying to find a piece for my washing machine, he said a ‘slightly weird older guy’ told him all about the big dinner they had as part of the festival at St. Elizabeth for $10 a person, with fried chicken or barbecue and a dessert of your choice.
The booth is just these three older gentlemen giving away free rosaries, free booklets on how to pray the rosary and the Divine Mercy chaplet, little pins of the footprints of 2 week gestation infants, and pray to end abortion bumper stickers. And little bracelets that say ‘God is good’ and ‘Jesus is risen.’
I took a bracelet and told the gentleman sitting there that I already had most of the booklets and thanked him for being there. He nodded and said, ‘well, we’re trying. We’re trying.’
And yeah I walked away blinking back tears for no good reason.
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The Church is bleeding from many wounds. Sins of abuse and corruption still plague the Body of Christ. The call that St. Francis received to “rebuild my Church” resounds. Starting on Ash Wednesday, join us in praying a Divine Mercy Chaplet each day of Lent for the purification, healing, and renewal of ourselves and the Church. Together, with the power of the Holy Spirit, we will rebuild.
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radioteopoli · 6 years
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Radio Teopoli, AM530 wants you to join Catholics all around the world celebrating Divine Mercy Sunday by tuning into our regular Saturday program on AM530 with a special presentation from a Lighthouse Catholic Media exclusive titled the Saving Power of Divine Mercy featuring FR. JASON BROOKS. St. Pope John Paul II said that Divine Mercy is THE message for the third millennium and God's gift to our time. There is nothing that mankind needs more than Christ's Divine Mercy. To help us avail ourselves of that loving mercy, Fr. Brooks focuses on what we know of God's Mercy, our response to His Love, how we can become merciful to others, and how to become apostles of mercy. Bonus: At the end of this presentation, the Divine Mercy chaplet is led by Fr. Francis Peffley, Mark Forrest - an Irish tenor, and Muriel Forrest. We hope you enjoy it. You don't want to miss it! 
You can listen online here: am530.ca
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anastpaul · 7 years
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Saint of the Day – 8 August – St Dominic de Guzman – Founder of the Dominican Order of Preachers – Priest, Founder, Confessor, Teacher, Preacher, Mystic, Miracle-Worker, Apostle of the Holy Rosary (1170 at Calaruega, Burgos, Old Castile – noon 6 August 1221 at Bologna, Italy).  He was Canonised on 13 July 1234 by Pope Gregory IX at Rieti, Italy who declared, after signing the Bull of Canonisation on 13 July, 1234, Pope Gregory IX declared that he no more doubted the saintliness of Saint Dominic than he did that of Saint Peter and Saint Paul.   Patronages – astronomers, astronomy, falsely accused people, scientists, Dominican Republic, Batanes-Babuyanes, Philippines, prelature of, Bayombong, Philippines, diocese of, Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic, Santo Domingo Indian Pueblo, Valletta, Malta.   Attributes – chaplet, Dominican carrying a rosary and a tall cross, Dominican holding a lily, Dominican with dog and globe, Dominican with fire, Dominican with star shining above his head, dog with a torch in its mouth, rosary, star.
Dominic de Guzman was born in Calaruega, Spain, son to noble parents Felix Guzman and Blessed Joan of Aza.   While only a boy, he demonstrated great piety, spending his days in contemplation and prayer, under the influence of his mother’s great love of the Lord.   At Dominic’s baptism, Blessed Joan saw a star shining from his chest, which became another of his symbols in art, and led to his patronage of astronomy.
Educated by his uncle, a priest, Dominic soon traveled to Palencia, where he attended university and was eventually ordained a priest.   While at university, he demonstrated strict penances and rigorous study but his teachers and classmates soon also noted the tenderest of hearts and the gentlest of spirits.   Dominic demonstrated great care for those in need, practicing love and charity without judgment.
Following his ordination, Dominic was appointed the prior superior of his Augustinian Order and strictly observed the Benedictine rule prescribed.   Selected as canon to the Bishop of Osma, he accompanied Bishop Diego de Avezedo to Languedoc to join with the Cistercian Order in their fight against heresy.   It was here that the idea of founding an order of preachers, committed to eradicating heresy, first occurred to Dominic.
In 1215, Dominic established himself, with six followers, in a house given by Peter Seila, a rich resident of Toulouse.   Dominic saw the need for a new type of organisation to address the spiritual needs of the growing cities of the era, one that would combine dedication and systematic education, with more organisational flexibility than either monastic orders or the secular clergy.   He subjected himself and his companions to the monastic rules of prayer and penance;  and meanwhile bishop Foulques gave them written authority to preach throughout the territory of Toulouse.   In the same year, the year of the Fourth Lateran Council, Dominic and Foulques went to Rome to secure the approval of the Pope, Innocent III.   Dominic returned to Rome a year later and was finally granted written authority in December 1216 and January 1217 by the new pope, Honorius III for an order to be named “The Order of Preachers” (“Ordo Praedicatorum”, or “O.P.,” popularly known as the Dominican Order).
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It was not long thereafter that Dominic founded an institute for women at and attached several preaching friars to it.   During a subsequent crusade against the Albigensian heresy, Dominic followed the papal armies and preached to all who would listen.   He had little success, however and returned home to a castle bequeathed to him, where he founded an order dedicated to the conversion of the Albigensians.   The order was canonically approved by the bishop of Toulouse the following year and two years later received Pope Honorius III’s approval.   The Order of Preachers, the Dominicans, was founded.
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Saint Dominic spent the remaining years of his life organising his new order, traveling throughout Europe preaching and attracting new members and establishing new houses. The new order, under his direction, was astoundingly successful in conversion, based upon contemplative and intellectual approaches, coupled with the contemporary and popular needs of the people.   His ideal, and that of his Order, was to link organically a life with God, study and prayer in all forms, with a ministry of salvation to people by the word of God.   His ideal: contemplata tradere: “to pass on the fruits of contemplation” or “to speak only of God or with God.”   (Read the Nine Ways of Prayer of St Dominic here: https://www.fisheaters.com/stdominic9ways.html)
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There was a time that St Dominic became discouraged at the progress of his mission.   To him, it seemed that no matter how much he worked, heresy remained.   As he contemplated the future of his order, he received a vision from Our Blessed Mother, who showed him a wreath of roses, representing the Holy Rosary.   Mary told him to say the Rosary daily, to teach it to all who would listen and eventually the faith would defeat heresies.  The spread of the Rosary, is attributed to the preaching of Saint Dominic.   The Rosary has for centuries been at the heart of the Dominican Order.   Pope Pius XI stated, “The Rosary of Mary is the principle and foundation on which the very Order of Saint Dominic rests for making perfect the life of its members and obtaining the salvation of others.” For centuries, Dominicans have been instrumental in spreading the rosary and emphasizing the Catholic belief in the power of the rosary. Saint Dominic is spread devotion to the Rosary, and used it to strengthen his own spiritual life.
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Saint Dominic is also remembered for miracles (raising four people from the dead) and miraculous visions.   On one occasion, he received a vision of a poor beggar, who he sought out the following day.  Finding the beggar, Dominic embraced him and said, “You are my companion and must walk with me. If we hold together, no earthly power can withstand us.”   The beggar turned out to be Saint Francis of Assisi, and the two holy men became the closest of friends.
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St Dominic died at the age of fifty-one, “exhausted with the austerities and labours of his career”.   He had reached the convent of St Nicholas at Bologna, Italy, “weary and sick with a fever”.   He  “made the monks lay him on some sacking stretched upon the ground” and that “the brief time that remained to him was spent in exhorting his followers to have charity, to guard their humility, and to make their treasure out of poverty”.    He died at noon on 6 August 1221.   His body was moved to a simple sarcophagus in 1233. Under the authority of Pope Gregory IX, Dominic was canonised in 1234.   In 1267 Dominic’s remains were moved to the shrine, made by Nicola Pisano and his workshop. The feast of Saint Dominic is celebrated with great pomp and devotion in Malta, in the old city of Birgu and the capital city Valletta.   The Dominican order has very strong links with Malta and Pope St. Pius V, a Dominican friar himself, aided the Knights of St. John to build the city of Valletta.
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(via AnaStpaul – Breathing Catholic)
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St. Francis of Assisi Chaplet Bracelet, St. Francis Chaplet, Spiritual Religious Jewelry, Catholic Prayer Beads, Meditation Aid, Niner
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prayingwithfeet · 8 years
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Mercy Continues
Even though life has been in the way of updating this blog, that does not mean my thoughts have stopped…nor my experiences as a pilgrim.
My pilgrimage to Assisi, Rome, and Krakow has seemed to have left an indelible mark on my spirit. During my travels, I visited new places and returned to old. I met new people and saw familiar faces in a different light. I tried new things and engaged in the same routine with a renewed vision. I walked through doors of Mercy that have been opened to pilgrims for hundreds of years, strolled down roads in the home town of saints, and stood in silence before the Gates of Hell.  I visited the home town of a beloved pope and listened to the wisdom of another. I found joy in difficult moments and saw hope flourish from the ashes of hate. 
My suitcase didn’t come back heavier with souvenirs. I couldn’t seem to stop for a moment to go shopping because I wanted to experience every movement to it’s fullest. I did end up bringing back with me two things: Mercy and Trust. 
As it was the Year of Mercy, this is a no brainer.  The Divine Mercy Chaplet was said throughout the pilgrimage, we walked the pilgrimage walk of Mercy in Rome, and in every reflection we heard from the Pope, a Cardinal, Bishop, Priest, Deacon, or Lay Person Mercy was in their words.  We were in the chapel where Christ asked us to pray for Divine Mercy and received Mercy through the sacrament of Reconciliation in its shadow.  
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In the Field of Mercy pilgrims could receive the sacrament of Reconciliation. In the background is the Shrine of Divine Mercy built next to the small chapel (green roof) where St. Faustina received Jesus’ message to give the Divine Mercy Image to the world along with the Divine Mercy Chaplet. 
Trust was another gift that was given. On pilgrimage, you often have to rely on the goodness and kindness of others. You have to trust others to lead you where you need to go or trust that you can find your own way. You have to trust that you can figure out problems when they arise. You have to trust that you will be able to walk when you feel like your feet cannot carry you any further. The phrase “Jesus, I trust in You,” echoed in my heart with every step I took. When I faltered and failed to trust, those words came back and I literally saw the light (true story: I was looking for a candle during the evening vigil in Campus Misericordiae and started to panic with the thought that I wasn’t going to take part in this important moment. I left my group and found found where they were distributing the candles. Relieved, I came back to my group, only to find that they already received candles. Should have trusted…).  
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Me waking up in Campus Misericordae along with a million of my closest friends. 
So why am I writing this now? I’ve been back for six months. Why now?
My beloved country is on the eve of a tradition that has taken place 44 times in its history: the peaceful transition of power from one president to another. There are strong opinions and thoughts on both sides. Celebration and fear. Hope and despair. Optimism and pessimism.  Activism and apathy. Civility and bullying. Pulling each other up while some push others down. We’ve seem to be a country of extremes. 
While I am not happy with the results of the election, as we were reminded while watching “Sherlock” on PBS, “It is what it is.” We can’t change the results of the election. We just can’t. But we can change how we respond. 
My prayer for the United States of America is three fold: One for Mercy, One for Trust, and one for Unity.
Prayer for Mercy: Mercy, as I have come to understand it, is the loving compassion we can show another person, even if we feel like they don’t deserve it. Giving and showing Mercy is one of the strongest things anyone can do. This election cycle has challenged me in this aspect. I am not a fan of the man that was elected president. His words and deeds have hurt me, have marginalized others, and have been against my values (especially on the topics of giving dignity to each human life). And yet I am called to love him as a child of God. I am called to give him Mercy. That does not mean staying silent when his actions will end up hurting others or go against the values of Catholic Social Teaching. It is the duty of every citizen to speak up for the marginalized and give voice to the voiceless.  But we must do it with Mercy. We must speak about our neighbors with compassion and understanding. We must continue to give and be love even if we don’t agree. At the end of the day, our next president is just a human man, with faults and, though this is an assumption, a sad, lonely life. And our neighbors who we disagree with want to find their place in the world as much as we do. Name calling and spewing hate will not win battles. It will only deepen the wound. As St. Faustina wrote, “Be always Merciful.” 
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Prayer for Trust: There’s a lot of apprehension and uncertainty within many of my fellow citizens, myself included. Change is scary especially if we didn’t want the kind of change we are receiving. If we are to look to someone’s past as a predictor of what they might do in the future…well, we might have the right to be nervous. Those who depend on the Affordable Care Act for health insurance are right to be concerned that they may loose it. Those who depend on the DREAM act to receive dignity as a worker have a right to be anxious. There is a lot to be uncertain of and we have the duty, the obligation to take action if our neighbor’s dignity is under threat. Even through all of this, we are called to trust. “Jesus, I trust in You,” the saying at the feet of Jesus in the Divine Mercy image, isn’t there because it makes a pretty border.  It’s there because that’s what Christ is asking us to do: trust in Him. Through that trust, mercy can flow. Through that trust, our hearts open to loving others more purely. Through that trust, we find solace and comfort. It’s like when Jesus called Peter to walk out of the boat and into the storm. Peter initially thought that the safest place was where he was standing, on the wooden floor of the boat. When he gave in and allowed himself to fully trust in Jesus he was able to walk out into the raging water and clearly see the face of Christ. We might be walking into a storm of uncertainty and despair right now, but when we trust in God…oh the wonders that we can achieve! Imagine a world of love and forgiveness and mercy. When we open ourselves and listen to what God is calling us to do and to be, we can make something beautiful together!
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Prayer for Unity: We can’t do anything alone. That might need to be America’s mantra for the next few years. I can’t do anything alone. When I push people away, I miss out on the opportunity to learn from someone else, even if it is a clearer understanding of what we disagree on. I can’t do my job without interacting with others. I can’t go to the grocery story without realizing that the food I am buying was placed on the shelf by a person, and before that, was packaged by a group of people, and before that was grown by human hands. Everything I own is because of interconnections of our existence. Martin Luther King Jr. once said:  “In a real sense all life is inter-related. All men are caught in an inescapable network of mutuality, tied in a single garment of destiny. Whatever affects one directly, affects all indirectly. I can never be what I ought to be until you are what you ought to be, and you can never be what you ought to be until I am what I ought to be… This is the inter-related structure of reality.” When my neighbor’s house is on fire, I can’t stand there and watch it burn because my house might catch fire next. In order for me to succeed, my neighbor has to succeed along with me.  On the night I was searching for a candle, Pope Francis was delivering a homily. I remember very clearly hearing Pope Francis call for us the young people of the world, to do one simple task: Build bridges made of living hands reaching out to each other. 
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There is so much good in each other that we miss it when we are focusing on our differences. When we are yelling and accusing, we forget to treat the other with love and respect as God has called us to. What would happen if we challenge ourselves to work with or talk to someone whose political background is different than our own? I’m guessing the bridges of prejudice and judgement would disappear and we will instead gain a deeper appreciation for the unique, loved person that they are. We might even find that we share some of the same values. In other words…
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Leslie Knope is my spirit animal. I once, unknowingly, ate at the same waffle restaurant in Washington DC as she did in “Parks and Recreation.” When I found out, I about died out of sheer happiness. 
On this inauguration day, I’m going to spend it doing what I always do: go to work, interact with a vast array of people, and help whenever I can. I’ll probably add in there a Divine Mercy Chaplet (or 3). Join me in prayer if you would like. Exercise your constitutional right to express your thoughts and opinions. Be kind to your neighbor. Be Mercy. 
Pax et Bonum  Peace and All Goodness
Vicky
PS: I created a playlist that was inspired by this pilgrimage. Enjoy!
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truedevotiondesign · 6 years
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Today we celebrate the feast of St. Francis of Assisi.
The founder of the Franciscan Order, he is the patron saint of animals. 🐕 🐱
Don't forget to get your pets blessed!
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teesturtle · 4 years
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Thesaurus Precum Latinarum Table of Contents
Introductio      Introduction
Orationes Utilissimae      Basic Prayers
Institutio Catholica      Numbers to Remember
Symbola      Creeds
Ad Deum (To God)
Trinitas      The Trinity
Deus Pater      God the Father
Deus Filius      God the Son
Deus Spiritus Sanctus      God the Holy Spirit
Liturgia et Sacramenta (Liturgy & Sacraments)
Orationes Cotidianae      Daily Prayers
In temporibus anni      For the seasons of the year
Angeli et Sancti (Angels & Saints)
Sancta Familia      The Holy Family
Beata Virgo Maria      Blessed Virgin Mary
Sanctus Ioseph      St. Joseph
Angeli      Angels
Sancti et Sanctae Dei      Holy Men and Women of God
Variae Occasiones      Various Occasions
Why Latin,  How to pronounce Latin,  Titivillus ("The Devil made me do it!"),  etc.
Sign of the Cross,  Glory Be,  Our Father,  Hail Mary,  Angel of God,  Blessings before and after meals,  Come Holy Spirit,  etc.
Ten Commandments,  Six Precepts of the Church,  Seven Sacraments,  Seven Deadly Sins,  Seven Works of Corporal Mercy,  Seven Works of Spiritual Mercy,  etc.
Apostles' Creed,  Nicene Creed,  Athanasian Creed,  Creed of Pius IV
Gloria,  Te Deum,  Sanctus,  etc.
Litany to God the Father,  etc.
Stations of the Cross,  Chaplet of Divine Mercy,  etc.
Come, Holy Spirit,  etc.
Confessio      Confession
Orationes Ante Missam      Prayers Before Mass
Orationes Post Missam      Prayers After Mass
Devotio Eucharistica      Eucharistic Devotion
Hymni      Hymns
Psalmi      Psalms
Cantici      Canticles
The Angelus,  etc.
Advent,  etc.
Litany of the Saints,  St. Anthony of Padua,  St Benedict,  St Francis of Assisi,  St. Scholastica,  etc.
For the Dead,  etc.
GO HERE FOR MORE   http://preces-latinae.org/preces.html 
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