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Money & Our Mission of Love – Feb. 1, 2012

Posted by Mary Jane at 8:11 am | Catholicism Live

What does money really have to do with following Jesus?

You won’t want to miss tonight’s episode, when we discover how local area organizations are making an impact with the gifts we give them. Lucy Herrera, representing Archbishop Gustavo’s Annual Appeal to the faithful, shares powerful stories. She will explain how you can take up Archbishop Gustavo on this challenge.

Sounds interesting. How can I participate in this program?

South Texans can tune into Time Warner Cable channel 15 or radio 89.7 FM – and anyone can listen online by clicking the LISTEN LIVE button on CatholicismLive.com from 8pm – 9pm Central Time!

Submit questions / comments using the form on CatholicismLive.com or call during the program: (210) 734-5371

More information related to this episode of Catholicism Live!:


Mysterious Shroud of Turin – Jan. 25, 2012

Posted by Mary Jane at 10:56 am | Catholicism Live, Evangelization

Do we have the true burial cloth of Christ?

The mysterious “Shroud of Turin” is controversial; some people suggest it is the true burial cloth of Jesus, while others say scientific evidence refutes this. But – new evidence has come to the light. We speak with Pete & Chris Remmert, who are leading the cause to establish a Center in San Antonio dedicated to the Shroud. You won’t want to miss it!

Sounds interesting. How can I participate in this program?

South Texans can tune into Time Warner Cable channel 15 or radio 89.7 FM – and anyone can listen online by clicking the LISTEN LIVE button on CatholicismLive.com from 8pm – 9pm Central Time!

Submit questions / comments using the form on CatholicismLive.com or call during the program: (210) 734-5371

More information related to this episode of Catholicism Live!:


Experts believe this may be the oldest painting of St. Paul

Saint of the Week: St. Paul the Apostle

(Memorial of His Conversion: January 25; His Feast Day: June 29)

St. Paul, the Apostle of the Gentiles, was converted from Judaism on the road to Damascus. He remained some days in Damascus after his Baptism, and then went to Arabia, possibly for a year or two to prepare himself for his future missionary activity. Having returned to Damascus, he stayed there for a time, preaching in the synagogues that Jesus is the Christ, the Son of God. For this he incurred the hatred of the Jews and had to flee from the city. He then went to Jerusalem to see Peter and pay his homage to the head of the Church.

Later he went back to his native Tarsus, where he began to evangelize his own province until called by Barnabus to Antioch. After one year, on the occasion of a famine, both Barnabus and Paul were sent with alms to the poor Christian community at Jerusalem. Having fulfilled their mission they returned to Antioch.

Soon after this, Paul and Barnabus made the first missionary journey, visiting the island of Cypress, then Pamphylia, Pisidia, and Lycaonia, all in Asia Minor, and establishing churches at Pisidian Antioch, Iconium, Lystra, and Derbe.

After the Apostolic Council of Jerusalem Paul, accompanied by Silas and later also by Timothy and Luke, made his second missionary journey, first revisiting the churches previously established by him in Asia Minor, and then passing through Galatia. At Troas a vision of a Macedonian was had by Paul, which impressed him as a call from God to evangelize in Macedonia. He accordingly sailed for Europe, and preached the Gospel in Philippi. Thessalonica, Beroea, Athens, and Corinth. Then he returned to Antioch by way of Ephesus and Jerusalem.

On his third missionary journey, Paul visited nearly the same regions as on the second trip, but made Ephesus where he remained nearly three years, the center of his missionary activity. He laid plans also for another missionary journey, intending to leave Jerusalem for Rome and Spain. Persecutions by the Jews hindered him from accomplishing his purpose. After two years of imprisonment at Caesarea he finally reached Rome, where he was kept another two years in chains.

The Acts of the Apostles gives us no further information on the life of the Apostle. We gather, however, from the Pastoral Epistles and from tradition that at the end of the two years St. Paul was released from his Roman imprisonment, and then traveled to Spain, later to the East again, and then back to Rome, where he was imprisoned a second time and in the year 67, was beheaded.

St. Paul untiring interest in and paternal affection for the churches established by him have given us fourteen canonical Epistles. It is, however, quite certain that he wrote other letters which are no longer extant. In his Epistles, St. Paul shows himself to be a profound religious thinker and he has had an enduring formative influence in the development of Christianity. The centuries only make more apparent his greatness of mind and spirit. His feast day is June 29th.

Saint Paul, pray for us!

biography from Catholic.org/Saints


Pearl of the Week:

A Doctor at Calvary: The Passion of Our Lord Jesus Christ as Described by a Surgeon by Dr. Pierre Barbet

What the Gospels don’t reveal about Christ’s sufferings, science does.

The results of a renowned surgeon’s unprecedented research into the physical sufferings of Our Lord–about which the Gospels reveal only the barest essentials–are collected in this mind-opening book. Dr. Pierre Barbet, writing in the early 1950s, relied heavily on his close analysis of the Shroud of Turin to re-create every stage of the Passion with precision and detail. The result: a minor classic of spirituality–by a layman. Back in print after 40 years, the book discusses, among much…

  • The painful hemorrhaging phenomenon which corresponds to Jesus’ sweating “drops of blood”
  • Evidence that Christ received more than the customary number of blows during the scourging
  • The “flagrum” used for scourging
  • The crown of thorns: more like a cap cutting into the head at very part
  • Did Christ simply drag the Cross to Calvary, as is typically depicted? Evidence suggests otherwise
  • Countless medically accurate details on the Shroud that no medieval artist could have forged, or even know about
  • Were Christ’s feet nailed separately, or one over the other?
  • Why his violent thirst?
  • The determining cause of Christ’s death: asphyxia after prolonged struggle

Hardcover
Published by Roman Catholic Books
Publication date: September 1993
ISBN: 0912141042
16 photographs and illustrations accompany Dr. Barbet’s text

Fr. Bruce Nieli, former USCCB Director of Evangelization, available to preach!

Posted by Mary Jane at 10:18 am | Evangelization

Attention, pastoral and groups leaders! Are you looking for a missionary to preach to your group about…

  1. Creating enthusiasm for our Catholic faith in Jesus
  2. Sharing and communicating our Catholic faith in Jesus with those outside our Church
  3. Transforming culture and secular society by our Catholic faith in Jesus…?

If you are, we encourage you to contact Paulist missionary & evangelist Fr. Bruce Nieli about preaching in English or Spanish to your parish or group.

Fr. Bruce, who previously served as Director of Evangelization for the US Conference of Catholic Bishops, served on our Advisory Board in the first years of our evangelization apostolate!

His mission is based on:

  • GO AND MAKE DISCIPLES: A National Plan and Strategy for Catholic Evangelization of the USCCB (United States Conference of Catholic Bishops)
  • The New Evangelization of Pope Benedict XVI

Contact Information:

Father Bruce Nieli, C.S.P.

St. Patrick’s Church

277 South Fourth Street

Memphis, Tennessee 38126

(901)292-9112

dbrucecsp@aol.com

Marriage Encounter – Jan. 18, 2012

Posted by Mary Jane at 1:00 am | Catholicism Live

How’s your marriage doing?

Not married – but know some married folks? We’ll talk marriage tips and goals from Marriage Encounter, a unique program dedicated to strengthening marriages at the local level, across the world.

Our host is Angela Sealana (Santana), our Ministry Coordinator, recently married!

Sounds interesting. How can I participate in this program?

South Texans can tune into Time Warner Cable channel 15 or radio 89.7 FM – and anyone can listen online by clicking the LISTEN LIVE button on CatholicismLive.com from 8pm – 9pm Central Time!

Submit questions / comments using the form on CatholicismLive.com or call during the program: (210) 734-5371

More information related to this episode of Catholicism Live!:


Saint of the Week: St. Eustochia Calafato (Her Feast Day: January 20)

Saint Eustochia was born with the name “Smeralda” (or ‘Esmeralda’ which means ‘emerald’) on March 25, 1434 in Messina, Italy. She was the fourth of six children. Smeralda’s mother was a fervent Christian and enthusiastic admirer of the Franciscan religious order, particularly of the reformers who insisted on following closely the life of St. Francis, especially by embracing poverty.

The reform’s first monastery was established in Messina by Blessed Matthew of Agrigento. He inspired a renewal of faith in the people of Messina by his ardent preaching and way of life. Smeralda’s mother had attended one of Blessed Matthew’s sermon’s as an eighteen-year-old bride, and devoted her life to prayer, penance and helping those in need. Thus, Smeralda was raised from childhood to exercise Christian piety and virtue, eventually exceeding her mother’s greatest hopes and expectations for her daughter.

Smeralda was beautiful both inside and out; she is thought to be the model for the painting The Virgin of the Annunciation by Antonello da Messina (seen here on the right). When she was fourteen years old, Smeralda wanted to become a Poor Clare nun, but her father arranged marriage for her to an older, wealthy widower. Smeralda kept her hope in religious life, and the widower died before the wedding. Her father again arranged a marriage for his daughter, but that man also died, followed by Smeralda’s father himself. When she entered the convent of Santa Maria di Basico, her brothers threatened to burn it down if she did not return home, which she did. But seeing her great desire, they experienced a change of heart. She finally entered and took her vows, with the name Eustochia, at fifteen-and-a-half years old.

Unfortunately, Eustochia came to discover that the convent had drifted away from the poverty lived by their foundress, St. Clare of Assisi. For more than a decade, Eustochia struggled to be an authentic Franciscan in the materialistic atmosphere. She received papal permission to establish a new convent, but found resistance to her reforms. Some friars refused to say Mass at the convent, believing that the sisters’ lifestyle was too strict. Eustochia appealed directly to Church authorities in Rome, who approved of Mother Eustochia’s renewal of Franciscan asceticism and poverty. The friars who had refused to assist at the convent were threatened with excommunication should they continue to resist.

Eustochia’s holiness drew many women to her community – so many that they soon outgrew the building and moved to Montevergine, near Messina, where their convent still stands. The local people considered Eustochia their patron and protector, and the cloister to be a place of refuge—especially during the earthquakes that rocked the area.

Eustochia was a spiritual mother to her daughters, instructing, educating and training them in the Franciscan life, encouraging them to meditate on the Passion of Christ. She often led them in two-hour Scripture study sessions.

Eustochia conveyed to her nuns the fruits of asceticism, and lovingly infused into their hearts the virtues which she herself practiced with admirable constancy and heroism. She taught them to permeate their whole lives with a simple and generous Franciscan spirituality, focusing on their Beloved Suffering Christ, to devote themselves to the Eucharist, and to draw all necessary strength and nourishment for daily meditation from an intense, liturgical life.

Eustochia’s love of Jesus in poverty and penance was outstanding. She wrote a treatise on the Passion, which, unfortunately, is now lost. Though she never visited the Holy Land, Eustochia had a devotion to the holy places that is reminiscent of Saint Bridget of Sweden. In fact, she had one of the first sets of the Stations of the Cross (as we know them today) constructed within her convent.

As she lay on her deathbed, Eustochia spoke to her daughters, who had gathered around her, about the Passion of Christ. She spoke for an hour before passing to her final rest on January 20, 1485.

A few days after her burial, Eustochia’s tomb and body manifested extraordinary phenomena, and many people received powerful graces through her intercession. The sisters wrote a biography of their revered mother and founder. She was beatified on June 22, 1987 and canonized on June 11, 1988 by Blessed Pope John Paul II.

Her incorrupt body rests in the Sanctuary of Montevergine in Messina, the monastery which she established, and can be visited twice a week.

In his homily, John Paul II said of St. Eustochia:

“Learning assiduously in the school of Christ Crucified, she grew in knowledge of him and, meditating on the splendid mysteries of grace, she conceived a faithful love for him. For our saint, the cloistered life was not a mere flight from the world in order to take refuge in God. Through the severe criticism which she imposed upon herself, she certainly wanted to be united to Christ, gradually eliminating whatever in her, as in every human person, was fallen; at the same time, she felt united to all. From her cell in the monastery of Montevergine she extended her prayer and the value of her penances to the whole world. In such a way she wanted to be near to each brother and sister, alleviate every suffering, ask pardon for the sins of all.”

Saint Eustochia Calafato, pray for us!


Pearl of the Week:

ForYourMarriage.org / OR / PorTuMatrimonio.org by The USCCB (United States Conference of Catholic Bishops) National Pastoral Initiative for Marriage

This website includes resources for anyone – single, married, divorced, widowed, or separated. Check it out especially for ideas on improving communication, overcoming difficulties, parenting, finances, date ideas, wedding advice, and daily tips on strengthening your marriage.

Also includes information on obtaining resources like programs, books, websites, organizations that can empower you, your spouse, and your family. Enjoy!

Harmless or dangerous? – Jan. 11, 2012

Posted by Mary Jane at 11:10 am | Catholicism Live, Evangelization

Are they harmless?

We see them on street corners, in magazines, and even in the grocery store, so how can common practices like horoscopes, ouija boards, or going to a curandera be dangerous? Maybe you or your family member has participated in some of these activities. If they seem fine, they weren’t harmed – right?

Tune in as we explore these practices from a different angle. Are you willing to hear the truth about how seemingly harmless practices may really be harming you or your loved ones?

Sounds interesting. How can I participate in this program?

South Texans can tune into Time Warner Cable channel 15 or radio 89.7 FM – and anyone can listen online by clicking the LISTEN LIVE button on CatholicismLive.com from 8pm – 9pm Central Time!

Submit questions / comments using the form on CatholicismLive.com or call during the program: (210) 734-5371

More information related to this episode of Catholicism Live!:


Saint of the Week: St. Andre Bessette (His Feast Day: January 6)

Alfred Bessette was born Aug. 9, 1845. At his birth he was so weak that his parents baptized him. Alfred’s father moved the family to Farnhan in 1849 where he hoped to lift them from poverty while working as a lumberman. He died five years later when he was crushed by a falling tree. Alfred was nine at the time.

His mother found herself widowed at 40 with 10 children in her care. Three years later she died of tuberculosis, having never fully recovered from the shock of her husband’s death. Much later, Brother Andre was heard to say: “I rarely prayed for my mother, but I often prayed to her.”

The family was dispersed. At age 12, Alfred was forced to leave school to learn a trade and to look for work. He began thirteen years of wandering from job to job with few belongings and very little reaming; he was barely able to write his name or read his prayer book.

In spite of his physical weakness, Alfred tried to make a living as an unskilled worker. He traveled from job to job as an apprentice and was easily exploited by those stronger than him. For a time, he worked on construction projects. Later, he made his living as a farm boy, tinsmith, blacksmith, baker, cobbler and coachman.

Following the flow of French-Canadian emigrants, he went to the United States and worked four years in the textile mills. Even in poor health, he put his whole heart into his work. “Despite my weak condition, I did not let anyone get ahead of me as far as work was concerned,” he said later.

In 1867, he resumed to Canada with thousands of others who were to witness the dawn of the Canadian Confederation.

Three years later, Alfred presented himself as a candidate at the novitiate of the Congregation of Holy Cross in Montreal. Because of his uncertain health, his superiors had doubts concerning his religious vocation. Finally, he was accepted and given the name Brother Andre. He was made porter at Notre Dame college and was known to say: “When I entered the community, my superiors showed me the door, and I remained there 40 years without leaving.” He also washed floors and windows, cleaned lamps, brought in firewood, and worked as messenger.

Soon Brother Andre started to welcome the sick and broken-hearted. He invited them to pray to St. Joseph to obtain favors. Before long, many people reported their prayers were being answered. For 25 years, in his small office or in the tramway station across the street from the college, Brother Andre spent six to eight hours a day receiving visitors. He built a chapel with the help of friends and with the money he earned giving haircuts to the students of the college. He was certain that St. Joseph wanted a place on the mountain and he spent his whole life preparing a beautiful shrine in the saint’s honor.

In the meantime, there was talk of healings which doctors could not explain. Brother Andre began visiting the sick and earned the reputation of miracle-worker. But he strongly protested: “I am nothing … only a tool in the hands of Providence, a lowly instrument at the service of St. Joseph.” He went even further: “People are silly to think that I can perform miracles. It is God and St. Joseph who can heal you, not I.”

His aloofness in the presence of strangers contrasted sharply with the carefree side he showed friends. He loved to tease. He would often say: “You must not be sad; it is good to laugh a little.” Brother Andre was always cheerful and tried to communicate his happiness to others, especially to the poor and unfortunate. He used his sense of humor to share his joy and to slip some good advice into a conversation, or to change the subject when a verbal attack on someone was brewing.

He was a man of determination who refused to compromise his principles. His great respect for others was largely responsible for the respect others had for him. He was a very sensitive man. At times, he could be seen crying with the sick or being moved to tears after hearing a particularly sad story from one of his visitors.

During all these years, an immense project was being realized and larger crowds were swarming to the Oratory. The first small chapel had been erected in 1904, but it soon became too small to receive all the people who were coming to the mountain. The chapel was extended in 1908 and again in 1910. Still, a larger church was needed.

In 1917, a new crypt church, able to hold a thousand persons, was inaugurated. This, however, was only the starting point of an even more important endeavor. During his whole life, Brother Andre devoted his efforts to building the Oratory, which was to become the world’s greatest sanctuary dedicated to St. Joseph.

And yet, Brother Andre never referred to “my project, my work”. On the contrary, he said: “God chose the most ignorant one. If there was anyone more ignorant than I am, God would have chosen him instead of me.”

When crowds came to the Oratory for important celebrations, Brother Andre would go into seclusion. He would hide behind the choir and pray quietly.

The economic crisis of 1931 forced the construction of the basilica to come to a standstill. In 1936, the authorities of the Congregation of Holy Cross called a special meeting to decide if the project should continue, especially since snow and frost threatened to damage the roofless structure. The provincial summoned Brother Andre for his opinion. The aging brother had only a few words for the assembly: “This is not my work, it is the work of St. Joseph. Put one of his statues in the middle of the building. If he wants a roof over his head, he’ll take care of it.”

Two months later, the congregation had the necessary funds to continue working on the construction.

Brother Andre assigned great importance to meeting and greeting people. He spent long hours in the office where thousands came to see him. In the evenings, he visited homes or hospitals accompanied by one of his friends.

In fact, he was so good-natured and put so much humor into these daily outings that some considered him to be an “old gadabout” who liked to travel around in a friend’s car. But Brother Andre replied: “There are some who say that it is for pleasure that I visit the sick, but after a day’s work, it is far from being for pleasure….”

His kindness and compassion were matched by a sharpness of mind which prompted him to say: “It is surprising that I am frequently asked for cures, but rarely for humility and the spirit of faith. Yet, they are so important….”

On another occasion he said: “If the soul is sick, one must begin by treating the soul.” His often repeated questions were well known: “Do you have faith? Do you believe that God can do something for you? Go confess yourself to the priest, go to communion and then come back to see me.” These were the words he used constantly when asked for favors and cures.

Brother Andre understood the sense and the value of suffering and spoke with depth when addressing the subject. “People who suffer have something to offer to God. When they succeed in enduring their suffering, that is a daily miracle.”

To someone who was suffering, he said: “Do not seek to have these trials lifted from you. Instead, ask for the grace to bear them well.”

There are people who still claim to have received the gift of healing from Brother Andre and yet he always denied that he had any gift of healing. “I have no gift and I cannot give any.”

Generally, he encouraged people to see a doctor for treatment. To doctors, he said: “Your work is good. Your science was given to you by God. You must thank Him and pray to Him.”

“God,” he said, “is love and he loves us; that is the heart of the Christian faith.”

“God gave us the commandments and it is in observing them that we show whether we love God. Pray that you may obtain a true love of God. God loves us so much. He wants us to love Him.”

Brother Andre’s way of speaking about God helped him succeed in sowing seeds of hope in the people he met. One of his friends said: “I never brought a sick person to Brother Andre without that person returning home enriched. Some were cured. Others died some time later, but Brother Andre had consoled them.”

To live in God’s house is heaven, Brother Andre said: “You know, it is permitted to desire death if one’s unique goal is to go toward God. When I die, I will go to heaven, I will be much closer to God than I am now; I will have more power to help you.”

A few months before his death, those around him heard him cry out, “I am suffering so much, my God! My God!” And then, in a very weak voice: “Here is the grain,” as if referring to the Gospel ["Unless the grain of wheat falls into the ground and dies, it remains alone. But If it dies, it brings forth much fruit" (Jn 12, 24)].

“He spent his whole life speaking of others to God, and of God to others,” said a friend of Brother Andre’s. It is difficult to say at what point in his life work began and ended, and at what point prayer started and ended: the two seemed to flow so naturally one into the other. He died Jan. 6, 1937, at the age of 92, and newspapers reported that more than a million people attended his wake and burial.

His body lies today in a simple tomb in the beautiful basilica that rises gracefully on Mount Royal. To this day, thousands of visitors come to St. Joseph Basilica to receive physical and spiritual healing.

Saint Andre Bessette, pray for us!

Learn more about Brother Andre by reading an extended biography at Catholicism.org – click here.


Pearl of the Week:

The New Age Counterfeit: A Study Guide for Individual of Group Use by Johnnette S. Benkovic

Johnnette Benkovic illuminates the New Age Movement as a complex arrray of beliefs and programs that often masks its real intent. She paints it as Satan’s counterfeit intent on the destruction of Christianity. Includes sections on mysticism, the occult, wicca, satanism, neo-paganism, extremist ‘feminism’ and more.


St. Matthew Catholic Church – 10703 Wurzbach Road – San Antonio, Texas

Jan 18 & Jan 25  (8am-9am) Come and Learn more!

Learn to Discern: Is it Christian or New Age? (includes Yoga, etc.)
When I first began to research the new age back in the late 80’s, it was prevalent but still largely on the fringe. In the intervening decades however, it made steady strides and marched right into the mainstream of society. Today, so much a part of the cultural mindset has it become that it is all but transparent, barely visible if visible at all. However, its tenets and beliefs remain irreconcilable with the revealed truth of Sacred Scripture and the teachings of the Church. The Labyrinth, Channeling, Neo-Paganism, Yoga, Reiki, healing touch, Harry Potter, The Twilight Series, Wicca, Eco-Spirituality. What do they all have in common? Though seemingly diverse, they all share in a confused notion of who God is, who man is, and what the world is – a notion incompatible with the revealed truth of Sacred Scripture and the teachings of the Church – but a notion, worldview, that has led many into false spiritualities and practices.

The Miraculous Medal – Jan 4, 2012

Posted by Mary Jane at 2:26 pm | Catholicism Live

How can a little piece of metal be called “miraculous”?

In November 2011, the Pilgrim Center of Hope organized and led a Marian Pilgrimage to Fatima, Lourdes and Shrines of  Paris.  One of those Shrines in Paris is located in the center of town on a street called Rue de Bac.  It is there, where Mary, the Mother of God appeared to a nun in 1830 and gave her a unique mission – to have a medal made with the image Mary gave her.   Learn what why this mission since 1830 has been instrumental for thousands of healings, conversions and hope!  Hear about a powerful conversion and how you can obtain this complimentary medal called “The Miraculous Medal”.

That is the topic for “Catholicism Live!” on Wednesday, January 4th!

Miraculous Medal Shrine

Miraculous Medal Shrine in Paris

Sounds great! How can I participate in this program?

South Texans can tune into Time Warner Cable channel 15 or radio 89.7 FM – and anyone can listen online by clicking the LISTEN LIVE button onCatholicismLive.com from 8pm – 9pm Central Time!

Submit questions / comments using the form on CatholicismLive.com or call during the program: (210) 734-5371

More information related to this episode of Catholicism Live!:

The Miraculous Medal – front sideMiraculous Medal - front sideMiraculous Medal - back side

The Miraculous Medal – back side

The Prayer of John Paul II in the Chapel

«Oh Mary, conceived without sin, pray for us who have recourse to thee. »

O Mary, conceived without sin, pray for us who have recourse to you. O Mary, this was the prayer that you gave to Saint Catherine Labouré in the Chapel of the Apparitions, more than one hundred and fifty years ago! […]
This invocation, engraved on the Miraculous Medal, is now worn and repeated by the faithful throughout the world!
Blessed are you among women!
You are intimately associated with the work of our Redemption, associated with the Cross of our Savior, your heart has been pierced, next to his heart. And now, in the glory of your Son, you never cease to intercede for us, poor sinners.
You watch over the Church for you are its Mother. You watch over each of your Children. From God, you obtain for us, all graces that are symbolized by the rays of light which radiate from your open hands, and the only condition that you demand of us is that we approach with the confidence, the hardiness, and the simplicity of a child. And it is thus that you bring us before your Divine Son.                      John Paul II (1980)

Incorrupt Body of St. Catherine Laboure

Incorrupt Body of St. Catherine Laboure

SAINT OF THE WEEK – St. Catherine Laboure (1806-1876)

St. Catherine Laboure, virgin, was born on May 2, 1806. At an early age she entered the community of the Daughters of Charity, in Paris, France. Three times in 1830 the Virgin Mary appeared to St. Catherine Laboure, who then was a twenty-four year old novice.  Mry showed St. Catherine the medal of the Immaculate Conception, now universally known as the “Miraculous Medal.” She commissioned St. Catherine to have one made, and to spread devotion to this medal.

The fact that Saint Catherine rested her hands on the lap of the Blessed Mother did not make her a saint. She personally worked no miracles, nor did she practice externally heroic charity like other great saints. She was not materially poor as were the children of Fatima and Saint Bernadette… She sprang from upper middle class parents among the meadows and vineyards of Burgundy, France. Her father was an educated man and an excellent farmer living in the village of Fain-les-Moutiers not far from Djon. Her sanctity consists in half a century of faithful service as a simple Daughter of Charity.

We might expect that praise and prominence would be the lot of one so favored by heaven. But she sought none of it; rather, she fled from it. She wanted to be left alone to carry out her humble duties as a Daughter of Charity. For over forty years, she spent her every effort in caring for the aged and infirm, not revealing to those about her that she had been the recipient of our Lady’s medal. The Sisters with whom she lived held her in the highest esteem, and each one longed to be her companion.

In 1876, Catherine felt a spiritual conviction that she would die before the end of the year. Mary Immaculate gave Catherine leave to speak, to break the silence of  forty-six years. To her Sister Superior, Catherine revealed the fact that she was the sister to whom the Blessed Mother appeared. On the last day of December 1876, Saint Catherine passed on—once again to the hands of Mary—this time, however, in heaven.

Today her beautiful remains still lie fresh and serene. When her body was exhumed in 1933, it was found as fresh as the day it was buried. Though she had lived seventy years and was in the grave for fifty-seven years, her eyes remained very blue and beautiful; and in death her arms and legs were as supple as if she were asleep. Her incorrupt body is encased in glass beneath the side altar at 140 Rue du Bac, Paris, beneath one of the spots where our Lady appeared to her.

In the Chapel of the Apparition you can gaze upon the face and the lips that for forty-six years kept a secret which has since shaken the world.

She died on December 31, 1876, and was canonized on July 27, 1947. Her feast day is November 28.

PEARL OF THE WEEK – “The Conversion of Alphonse Ratisbonne”  by Baron Theodore de Bussieres

Pear of the Week

Alphonse Ratisbonne was a French Jew who was miraculously converted while visiting a Church in Rome with a Catholic friend.

His brother had previously converted and become a Catholic priest, but Alphonse hated the Catholic Church and vowed never to enter.

This is the story of the power of prayer and a miracle of grace. It is a powerful, delightful, and consoling story that every apostolic Catholic should know. This is

how Ratisbonne related his experience in the church that cold day in January of 1842.

“All I can say is that the moment when the Blessed Virgin made a sign with her hand, the veil fell from my eyes; not one veil only, but all the veils which were wrapped around me disappeared, just as snow melts beneath the rays of the sun.’ ‘I am asked how I attained a knowledge of these truths, since it is well known that I never opened a religious book, had never read a page of the Bible, and that the dogma of original sin, which is either denied or utterly forgotten by the modern Jews, had never for a single moment occupied my thoughts—indeed, I doubt whether I had ever heard the words which express it.

How, then, did I arrive at a knowledge of it? I know not. All that I know is that when I entered that church I was profoundly ignorant of everything, and that when I came out I saw everything clearly and distinctly.”

This edition is faithful to the original published in 1842.