Saturday, December 29, 2012



“Love is a mutual self-giving which ends in self-recovery.”

-Archbishop Fulton Sheen

Monday, December 17, 2012

Merry Christmas Mr. Stein

Apparently the White House referred to Christmas Trees as “Holiday Trees” for the first time this year which prompted CBS presenter, Ben Stein, to present this piece which I would like to share with you. I think it applies just as much to many countries as it does to America . . .

The following was written by Ben Stein and recited by him on CBS Sunday Morning Commentary.

My confession:

I am a Jew, and every single one of my ancestors was Jewish. And it does not bother me even a little bit when people call those beautiful lit up, bejewelled trees, Christmas trees. I don't feel threatened. I don't feel discriminated against. That's what they are, Christmas trees.

It doesn't bother me a bit when people say, “Merry Christmas” to me. I don't think they are slighting me or getting ready to put me in a ghetto. In fact, I kind of like it. It shows that we are all brothers and sisters celebrating this happy time of year. It doesn't bother me at all that there is a manger scene on display at a key intersection near my beach house in Malibu. If people want a crib, it's just as fine with me as is the Menorah a few hundred yards away.

I don't like getting pushed around for being a Jew, and I don't think Christians like getting pushed around for being Christians. I think people who believe in God are sick and tired of getting pushed around, period. I have no idea where the concept came from, that America is an explicitly atheist country. I can't find it in the Constitution and I don't like it being shoved down my throat.

Or maybe I can put it another way: where did the idea come from that we should worship celebrities and we aren't allowed to worship God? I guess that's a sign that I'm getting old, too. But there are a lot of us who are wondering where these celebrities came from and where the America we knew went to.

In light of the many jokes we send to one another for a laugh, this is a little different: This is not intended to be a joke; it's not funny, it's intended to get you thinking.

Billy Graham's daughter was interviewed on the Early Show and Jane Clayson asked her: “How could God let something like this happen?” (regarding Hurricane Katrina). Anne Graham gave an extremely profound and insightful response. She said: “I believe God is deeply saddened by this, just as we are, but for years we've been telling God to get out of our schools, to get out of our government and to get out of our lives. And being the gentleman He is, I believe He has calmly backed out. How can we expect God to give us His blessing and His protection if we demand He leave us alone?”

In light of recent events... terrorists attack, school shootings, etc. I think it started when Madeleine Murray O'Hare (she was murdered, her body found a few years ago) complained she didn't want prayer in our schools, and we said OK. Then someone said you better not read the Bible in school. The Bible says thou shalt not kill, thou shalt not steal, and love your neighbour as yourself. And we said OK.

Then Dr. Benjamin Spock said we shouldn't spank our children when they misbehave, because their little personalities would be warped and we might damage their self-esteem (Dr. Spock's son committed suicide). We said an expert should know what he's talking about. And we said okay.

Now we're asking ourselves why our children have no conscience, why they don't know right from wrong, and why it doesn't bother them to kill strangers, their classmates, and themselves.

Probably, if we think about it long and hard enough, we can figure it out. I think it has a great deal to do with 'WE REAP WHAT WE SOW.'

Funny how simple it is for people to trash God and then wonder why the world's going to hell. Funny how we believe what the newspapers say, but question what the Bible says. Funny how you can send 'jokes' through e-mail and they spread like wildfire, but when you start sending messages regarding the Lord, people think twice about sharing. Funny how lewd, crude, vulgar and obscene articles pass freely through cyberspace, but public discussion of God is suppressed in the school and workplace.

Are you laughing yet?

Funny how when you forward this message, you will not send it to many on your address list because you're not sure what they believe, or what they will think of you for sending it.

Funny how we can be more worried about what other people think of us than what God thinks of us.

Pass it on if you think it has merit.

If not, then just discard it.... no one will know you did. But if you discard this thought process, don't sit back and complain about what bad shape the world is in.

My Best Regards, Honestly and respectfully,

Ben Stein

Sunday, December 16, 2012

Thoughts and Prayers with Sandy Hook Victims


This is Msgr. Robert E. Weiss & Father Luke Suarez of Saint Rose of Lima Parish in Newtown, CT. Fr. Suarez is a recent graduate of Mount St. Mary's Seminary, where I served from 2002-2007. Nothing in seminary formation can prepare a priest for a situation like this. To reiterate an earlier post, please join me in remembering clergy of all faiths, emergency personnel, mental health professionals & others in our prayers too. May those who have died rest in peace & those who mourn experience consolation over time. - From Fr. Raymond Harris



Thursday, December 6, 2012

St. Nicholas of Myra - Like a Boss

Courtesy of AmericanPapist: http://www.facebook.com/americanpapist

St. Nicholas gave gifts to three young women who could not afford to marry so that they did not have to go into prostitution.  He also punched Arius in the face at the Council of Ephesus FTW.

Pax et bonum.

Monday, November 26, 2012

Offensive




"It's like church over here. It's like church in here. First of all, give an honor to God and our lord and savior Barack Obama." 

Foxx was being broadcast live on national television for the 2012 Soul Train Awards.


Friday, November 16, 2012

Bono Back in the Vatican

2012-11-16 Vatican Radio
(Vatican Radio) Irish rocker and anti-poverty campaigner Bono was back in the Vatican on Friday to thank the Catholic Church for its support of the Drop the Debt campaign a decade ago and to discuss further ways of working together on aid and development.
Vatican Radio’s Philippa Hitchen met up with the lead singer of U2 as he was coming out of a meeting with the president of the Vatican’s Justice and Peace Council, Cardinal Peter Turkson….
Listen:  
During an almost hour long meeting the cardinal and the rock star turned activist talked about the huge success of the Jubilee 2000 campaign to free the poorest countries from their burden of foreign debts. Thanks to the success of that popular movement, Bono told me, World Bank figures show that “there are an extra 52 million children going to school” as governments have been able to invest in education instead of debt repayments. 
Bono said he was encouraging the cardinal to communicate to ordinary people in the pews the extraordinary impact they’d made by turning out on the streets in support of that campaign. He said the Church deserves “incredible credit for being in the vanguard of that movement.……it was an interfaith movement and it was also what you might call inter-disciplinary because you had priests and nuns walking alongside punk rockers and musicians and sports people and soccer mums… it was a great panoply of characters…..but I just think the Church hasn’t done a good job yet of telling people what they’ve achieved and we were just trying to figure out how best to do that.”
The U2 front man, who met with Pope John Paul II to seek support for his humanitarian work, said he’d “be delighted” to meet with Pope Benedict XVI. During his private audience with the former elderly pontiff, Bono’s famously gave him his blue fly-shades to try on. He also received from the Pope a silver crucifix which he pulled out from under his shirt to show me – I still wear it, he said with a smile. And he still clearly believes very much in the Catholic Church as an important partner in the struggle to improve the lives of the poorest of the poor.


Courtesy: Vatican Radio and news.va

http://www.news.va/en/news/rock-star-bono-back-in-the-vatican

Monday, November 12, 2012

Guilt


Whenever you feel guilty, even if it is because you have consciously committed a sin, a serious sin, something you have kept doing many, many times, never let the devil deceive you by allowing him to discourage you. Whenever you feel guilty
, offer all your guilt to the Immaculate, without analyzing it or examining it, as something that belongs to her…

My beloved, may every fall, even if it is serious and habitual sin, always become for us a small step toward a higher degree of perfection.

In fact, the only reason why the Immaculate permits us to fall is to cure us from our self-conceit, from our pride, to make us humble and thus make us docile to the divine graces.

The devil, instead, tries to inject in us discouragement and internal depression in those circumstances, which is, in fact, nothing else than our pride surfacing again.

If we knew the depth of our poverty, we would not be at all surprised by our falls, but rather astonished, and we would thank God, after sinning, for not allowing us to fall even deeper and still more frequently.

—Letter of Saint Maximilian Kolbe


Monday, October 22, 2012

St. Kateri Tekakwitha

2012-10-22 Vatican Radio
(Vatican Radio) The canonization of Kateri Tekakwitha marks the first time a Native North American has been raised to the altars. Known as the “Lily of the Mohawks”, Kateri was born in what is now New York. She moved to Quebec shortly after her baptism. Pilgrims from both Canada and the United States have come to Rome to attend her canonization. 
Canada’s Ambassador to the Holy See, Anne Leahy, is part of a high-level Canadian government delegation to the canonization. She spoke with Vatican Radio about Kateri’s significance today. “Kateri Tekakwitha being recognised by the Catholic Church is of importance not only to First Nations peoples or to Catholics, because the mere fact of being recognised as such means that she is really put up as a model for the universal Church, but as a model, in fact, by her life, by her beliefs, by her steadfastness—these are qualities for all individuals, and not only those associated with her immediate background or religion.” 
As the first native North American saint, Ambassador Leahy says St. Kateri’s life embodies the history of the encounter of the Catholic missionaries and the First Nations peoples. Ambassador Leahy says “Her life embodies, in many ways, the convergence of the values that her people had, in terms of their spirituality, a certain convergence with the Catholic Faith that the Jesuits brought.” 
Ambassador Leahy notes that Saint Kateri was proposed by Bd. John Paul II as a model for young people at World Youth Day in Toronto in 2012. And, because the First Nations peoples are so closely associated with love of creation and of the environment, Kateri is also seen as a patron of the environment and of ecology. That, she says, “still makes [Kateri] quite modern” and relevant in today’s world. 

Thursday, October 11, 2012

The Hypocrisy of Contemporary Tolerance


This work of art is not art at all but another piece of contemporary garbage made in the name of creativity.  Tolerance as society defines it today allows such works as this one to be done under the notion that all have the freedom to express themselves, which they do.  Just because someone has the freedom to do something does not give him the right to do so.  Just because one can does not mean that one ought.  When freedom is divorced from responsibility it becomes a mockery of itself.  Society as they would have it allows such blatant and offensive acts against Christianity, but goes out of its way to not dare offend followers of Islam.  In an age of absolute relativism, true tolerance is being abolished in the name of tolerance.
Pax et bonum,
Mike
'Piss Christ' by Andres Serrano
'Piss Christ' by Andres Serrano
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Sha
NEW YORK, NY (Catholic League) - Bill Donohue, the President of the Catholic League  for Religious and Civil Rights comments as follows:
On September 27, the Edward Tyler Nahem gallery in mid-town Manhattan will host an exhibit, "Body and Spirit: Andres Serrano 1987-2012," that features Serrano's "Piss Christ" piece; it shows a crucifix submerged in a jar of his own urine. The exhibit ends October 26.
Serrano has said that "Piss Christ" was "meant to question the whole notion of what is acceptable and unacceptable." There is not much to question: decent people know it is unacceptable.
But in elite cultural circles, anti-Christian art is not only acceptable, it is laudatory. Just don't offend Muslims. To wit: this week a disrespectful French cartoon of Muhammad was not shown on any of the network or cable TV news shows.
In 2006, when the Danish cartoons that angered Muslims appeared, not only were they not shown on the networks or cable, newspapers all across the nation refused to do so. In fact, the leading newspapers echoed the position of the New York Times: it said it was wrong to publish "gratuitous assaults on religious grounds."
Yet this same newspaper, in the same article about the Danish cartoons, reproduced the "dung on the Virgin Mary" artwork that was shown at the Brooklyn Museum of Art's "Sensation" exhibition in 1999! To show how acceptable anti-Christian art is, three days after "Sensation" opened, Christie's sponsored a "Piss Christ" print exhibit.
"Piss Christ," which dates back to the late 1980s, wouldn't matter as much to Christians in 2012 if it weren't for the supine statements offered by the Obama administration in the wake of an anti-Islamic video.
Never before have Americans learned how deeply offended our elites are by anti-religious fare. If only we could believe them. When have they ever condemned anti-Christian movies or art?
Courtesy of catholic.org

Monday, October 1, 2012

NYC Public Schools Giving Out Plan-B


The over intrusive legislation of New York City has sunk to a new low yet again in moral decency.  This latest move is lunacy in its most base form.    Such people who are in support of this movement tell those with objections to stay out of their bedrooms and then in the next breath make those same people who are opposed pay for what they use in their bedrooms.  Now this mindset is being forced upon those who ideally should be the most innocent in life, the youth.

Pax et Bonum,
Mike
WASHINGTON, DC (Catholic Online) - TheAssociated Press reported that  "New York City is dispensing the morning-after pill to girls as young as 14 at more than 50 public high schools, sometimes even before they have had sex."  This is part of a program which bears the acronym CATCH, "Connecting Adolescents To Comprehensive Health".
The program bypasses the primacy of parents in their indispensable role in the lives of their children way of its use of an "opt out" requirement rather than an "opt in". The presumption of the Nanny State social engineers in New York City is that these girls as young as 14 have some kind of right to get these drugs, free of charge.
Courtesy of www.catholic.org 


Tuesday, May 22, 2012

For Greater Glory in Theaters 6/1



What price would you pay for freedom? In the exhilarating action epic FOR GREATER GLORY an impassioned group of men and women each make the decision to risk it all for family, faith and the very future of their country, as the film's adventure unfolds against the long-hidden, true story of the 1920s Cristero War ­the daring people¹s revolt that rocked 20th Century North America.
Academy Award® nominee Andy Garcia headlines an acclaimed cast as General Gorostieta, the retired military man who at first thinks he has nothing personal at stake as he and his wife (Golden Globe winner Eva Longoria) watch Mexico fall into a violent civil war. Yet the man who hesitates in joining the cause will soon become the esistance¹s most inspiring and self-sacrificing leader, as he begins to see the cost of religious persecution on his countrymen . . . and transforms a rag-tag band of rebels into a heroic force to be reckoned with.  The General faces impossible odds against a powerful and ruthless government.  Yet is those he meets on the journey ­ youthful idealists, feisty renegades and, most of all, one remarkable teenager named Jose ­ who reveal to him how courage and belief are forged even when justice seems lost.

Courtesy:

Thursday, April 19, 2012

Cows, Quarks and Divine Simplicity