19 August 2025

Anniversary Blessings to Adam & E-Lynn!!!

Anniversary greetings to son Adam and his wife Erin, whose wedding anniversary is today!!! May this day, and each day of the upcoming year, be filled with the Lord's choicest blessings!!!

Thank You, Lord

Thank you, Lord, for the blessing of the various religious communities and for the many ways in which You work through them.

The Enduring Importance of St. Benedict

July 11th [was] the Feast of Saint Benedict of Nursia, the father of Western monasticism. He wrote his rulebook for monastic life around 530, and it emerged as a model for religious communities throughout the Middle Ages. It has come to be known as the Rule of St. Benedict and remains an essential guide for the structure of Catholics living in community to this day.

"Ora et labora" or "pray and work" is the axiom at the heart of Benedict's rule. It points to the necessity we all have to commune with God and live productive lives. But arriving at this starting point was far from simple in Benedict's time.

Born into a noble family in Nursia, Italy, Benedict was sent to Rome as a young man to finish his education but was disappointed to find a preoccupation among his educators with the cultivation of rhetorical skills devoid of any focus on God. So he left Rome to pursue a life of holiness and was drawn to live for a time in solitude under the direction of a hermit named Romanus. Other monks eventually sought out Benedict's leadership, and though he faced early conflicts in his attempts to build religious communities, he succeeded at Monte Cassino, where he founded the monastery that would form the roots of the Church's monastic tradition.

Though Benedict shunned the trend toward vanity in Roman education of the time, he never lost sight of the importance of cultivating personal talents. He merely sought to direct those talents towards God. In the counsel he gave to his community, he said, "Let us consider our place in sight of God and of His angels. Let us rise in chanting that our hearts and voices harmonize."

Though Benedict's rules are known for being strict, they are intended for those who freely choose the challenging path he lays out and are aimed at cultivating a loving environment where all members of the community can thrive and grow in their devotion to God. In Chapter IV of his rule, Benedict provides instruction on personal discipline but also on love of neighbor, extolling his community "to relieve the poor; to clothe the naked; to visit the sick; to bury the dead; to help in tribulation; to console the sorrowing." He ends this section by instructing, "And never to despair of the mercy of God."

During a time when the Roman empire was crumbling and lawlessness threatened towns and cities across Europe, Benedict's rule became a guide for those determined to live in love and harmony with one another. The monasteries of the Middle Ages that were inspired by his rule are now credited with preserving knowledge that would have otherwise been lost - and with cultivating a way of life that became a seed for Christianity to flourish.

In 1964, then-Pope, now-Saint, Paul VI declared St. Benedict Patron of Europe, calling him, "Messenger of peace, molder of union, magister of civilization, and above all herald of the religion of Christ and founder of monastic life in the West." And regarding the enduring importance of Benedict's rule in cultivating a civil society, Pope Benedict XVI said, "In seeking true progress, let us also listen to the Rule of St. Benedict as a guiding light on our journey." So let us pray that St. Benedict of Nursia intercedes for our religious communities around the world to be the seed once again for a revival of culture, love of neighbor, and faith in Christ.

This essay is a recent "Light One Candle" column, written by Fr. Ed Dougherty, M.M, of The Christophers' Board of Directors; it is one of a series of weekly columns that deal with a variety of topics and current events.)

Background information:

The Christophers


Reflection Starter

"All your tomorrows depend on today." - Source Unknown

17 August 2025

Birthday Blessings, David!!!

Birthday greetings to brother David, whose birthday is today!!! May this day, and each day of the upcoming year, be filled with the Lord's choicest blessings!!!

"In Christ There Is No East Or West"

As we continue our Sunday celebration, I offer this version of "In Christ There Is No East Or West":

 


Twentieth Sunday in Ordinary Time

Today the Church celebrates the Twentieth Sunday in Ordinary Time. The assigned readings are Jeremiah 38:4-6, 8-10; Hebrews 12:1-4; and Luke 12:49-53. The Responsorial Psalm is from Psalm 40 (Psalm 40:2-4, 18).

For one version of the Responsorial Psalm set to music, please visit: 

YouTube: 20th Sunday in Ordinary Time: Psalm 40 - Lord Come to My Aid [YEAR C]

The Gospel reading is as follows:

Jesus said to his disciples: "I have come to set the earth on fire, and how I wish it were already blazing! There is a baptism with which I must be baptized, and how great is my anguish until it is accomplished! Do you think that I have come to establish peace on the earth? No, I tell you, but rather division. From now on a household of five will be divided, three against two and two against three; a father will be divided against his son and a son against his father, a mother against her daughter and a daughter against her mother, a mother-in-law against her daughter-in-law and a daughter-in-law against her mother-in-law."

Reflections related to these readings:

Word on Fire: Sermons: Christ Came to Cast Fire Upon the Earth (Cycle C * 20th Week * Ordinary Time)

The Pilot: Echoes: Scott Hahn: Consuming fire (15 AUG 25)

The Pilot: Echoes: Deacon Greg Kandra: Scripture Reflection for August 17, 2025, Twentieth Sunday in Ordinary Time (13 AUG 25)


Thank You, Lord

Thank you, Lord, for the blessings offered to us via the pace of summer.

Daniel Esparza on the Grace of Summer

"St. Augustine might be the original procrastinator. In Confessions, he famously wrestles with the desire to change - just not yet. 'Make me chaste,' he pleads, 'but not yet.' Again and again, he delays with a simple word: cras - tomorrow. Then tomorrow again. Cras et cras, delay after delay.

"Augustine's problem wasn't laziness. It was fear. He feared what change would cost him. He clung to familiar habits, even while knowing they no longer satisfied him.

"In that way, he’s surprisingly relatable.. . ."

In a recent commentary, writer/scholar Daniel Esparza reflected on how summer might be a time not to get everything done, but to get one important thing done.

To access Mr. Esparza's complete post, please visit: 

Aleteia: Daniel Esparza: Augustine, procrastination, and the grace of summer (17 AUG 25)

Reflection Starter from Pope Leo XIV

"From the outside, the Church, like any human reality, may seem rough around the edges. However, her divine reality is revealed when we cross her threshold and find acceptance. Our poverty, vulnerability, and especially failures are finally embraced by the gentle strength of God, a love without sharp edges, an unconditional love.- Pope Leo XIV

16 August 2025

Guy Lombardo: "Sweet and Lovely"

As this blessed week draws to a close, I offer this version of "Sweet and Lovely" as presented by Guy Lombardo & His Royal Canadians:


 

Belated Anniversary Blessings, Mary and Chris!!!

Belated anniversary greetings to sister Mary and her husband Chris Gonzalez, who recently celebrated their wedding anniversary!!! May each day of the upcoming year be filled with the Lord's choicest blessings!!!