Posted on 02/25/2009 10:05:24 PM PST by Salvation
| ASH WEDNESDAY " Dust thou art, and into dust thou shalt return." |
| Rend your hearts, not your garments, and return to the Lord, your God. (Joel 2:13)
Ash Wednesday is a day of both fasting and abstinence. |
Another Lenten Prayer Ping!
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Thursday After Ash Wednesday
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"Whoever wishes to be my follower must deny his very self, take up his cross each day, and follow in my steps." (Luke 9:23)
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| Friday After Ash Wednesday The Fridays of Lent are days of abstinence from meat. |
| This, rather, is the fasting that I wish: releasing those bound unjustly, untying the thongs of the yoke; Setting free the oppressed. (Isaiah 58:6)
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Saturday After Ash Wednesday
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If you bestow your bread on the hungry and satisfy the afflicted; Then light shall rise for you in the darkness. (Isaiah 58:10)
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First Sunday of Lent
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"I set my bow in the clouds to serve as a sign of the covenant between me and the earth." (Genesis 9:13)
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| Monday, First Week of Lent |
| "I assure you, as often as you did it for one of my least brothers, you did it for me." (Matthew 25:40)
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| Tuesday, First Week of Lent |
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"Your Father knows what you need before you ask him. This is how you are to pray: Our Father...." (Matthew 6:8-9)
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| Wednesday, First Week of Lent |
| "For at the preaching of Jonah they reformed, but you have a greater than Jonah here." (Luke 11:32) Reflection. "Go through the world unnoticed if you can. Secret privations, secret sacrifices of your own will, which will never be known until all things are revealed, are surer instruments of perfection than chains and shirts of hair." ...Fr. Lasance Lenten Fact The original period of Lent was 40 hours. It was spent fasting to commemorate the suffering of Christ and the 40 hours He spent in the tomb. In the early 3rd century, Lent was lengthened to 6 days. About 800 AD it was changed to 40 days. Lenten Action. Plant a seed or bulb and watch it develop through the spring. Pray for your own spiritual growth. Prayer O Jesus, humbled to abjection for me, teach me to humble myself for love of You. |
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Thursday, First Week of Lent
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"Ask, and you will receive. Seek, and you will find. Knock, and it will be opened to you." (Matthew 7:7)
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Saturday, First Week of Lent
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"If you love those who love you, what merit is there in that?" (Matthew 5:46)
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Sunday, Second Week of Lent
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He was transfigured before their eyes and his clothes became dazzlingly white. (Mark 9:2-3)
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| Monday, Second Week of Lent |
| "Be compassionate, as your Father is compassionate." (Luke 6:36)
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| Tuesday, Second Week of Lent |
| Come now, let us set things right, says the Lord. (Isaiah 1:18)
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| Wednesday, Second Week of Lent |
| "Anyone among you who aspires to greatness must serve the rest." (Matthew 20:27)
Deny oneself Carry one's cross To follow Jesus Christ If you are ashamed of the Cross of Jesus Christ he will be ashamed of you before his Father Love the Cross Desire: crosses contempt pain abuse insults disgrace persecution humiliations calumnies illness injuries May Jesus prevail May his Cross prevail Divine love Humility Submission Patience Obedience: complete prompt joyful blind persevering .....St. Louis de Montfort
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| Thursday, Second Week of Lent |
| "At his gate lay a beggar named Lazarus." (Luke 16:20)
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Friday, Second Week of Lent
Fridays of Lent are days of abstinence from meat.
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Israel loved Joseph best of all his sons, for he was the child of his old age. (Genesis 37:3)
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Saturday, Second Week of Lent
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"Let us eat and celebrate because this son of mine was dead and has come back to life." (Luke 15:23-24)
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Sunday, Third Week of Lent
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"Zeal for your house consumes me." (John 2:17)
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Monday, Third Week of Lent
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"Go and wash...and your flesh will heal." (2 Kings 5:10)
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| Tuesday, Third Week of Lent |
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"Lord, when my brother wrongs me, how often must I forgive him?" (Matthew 18:21)
He was chosen by the eternal Father as the trustworthy guardian and protector of his greatest treasures, namely, his divine Son and Mary, Joseph's wife. He carried out this vocation with complete fidelity until at last God called him, saying 'Good and faithful servant, enter into the joy of your Lord.'..... Saint Bernardine of Siena
Gracious Saint Joseph, |
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Wednesday, Third Week of Lent
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"Take care...not to forget the things which your own eyes have seen." (Deuteronomy 4:9)
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| Thursday, Third Week of Lent |
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"If it is by the finger of God that I cast out devils, then the reign of God is upon you." (Luke 11:20)
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| Friday, Third Week of Lent Fridays of Lent are days of abstinence from meat. |
| "You shall love the Lord your God." (Mark 12:30)
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| Saturday, Third Week of Lent |
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"O God, be merciful to me a sinner!" (Luke 18:13)
Suppose one has forgiven an injury and experienced reconciliation with the injurer--a process of two distinct stages. In such situations, it is not helpful to repeatedly bring our remembrance of the injury into the relationship. Discretion and a willingness to let the past be the past are called for, for the sake of the relationship--call this a type of "forgetting" if you will.
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| Sunday, Fourth Week of Lent |
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"So must the Son of Man be lifted up, that all who believe may have eternal life in Him." (John 3:14,15)
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| Monday, Forth Week of Lent |
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I am about to create new heavens and a new earth. (Isaiah 65:17)
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| Tuesday, Fourth Week of Lent |
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I saw water flowing out from beneath the threshold of the temple. (Ezekiel 47:1)
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| Wednesday, Fourth Week of Lent |
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"If you believed Moses you would then believe me, for it was about me that he wrote." (John 5:46)
Lenten Question |
| Thursday, Fourth Week of Lent |
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Can a mother forget her infant, be without tenderness for the child of her womb? Even should she forget, I will never forget you." (Isaiah 49:15)
Flower of Obedience I met Her in a garden,
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| Friday, Fourth Week of Lent |
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"Let us beset the just one, because he is obnoxious to us." (Wisdom 2:12)
Lenten Fact Since Lent is a penitential season of preparation for Easter, the Stations of the Cross, which follow the path of Christ from Pontius Pilate's praetorium to Christ's tomb have been a popular devotion in parishes. In the 16th century, this pathway was officially entitled the "Via Dolorosa" (Sorrowful Way) or simply Way of the Cross or Stations of the Cross. |
| Saturday, Fourth Week of Lent |
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Lord, my God, in you I take refuge! (Psalm 7:2)
Lenten Fact Tradition holds that our Blessed Mother visited daily the scenes of our Lord's passion. |
| Sunday, Fifth Week of Lent |
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Then a voice came from the sky: "I have glorified it, and will glorify it again." (John 12:28)
Lenten Fact Passiontide is the last two weeks of Lent, when the readings and prayers of the liturgy focus on the Passion of Our Lord. The word 'passion', in the Christian sense, does not mean an intense emotion; it refers to the historical events of Jesus' suffering and death. Although for several centuries the Fifth Sunday of Lent was known as Passion Sunday, after the Second Vatican Council this name was restored to the Sunday at beginning of Holy Week , formerly called Palm Sunday. As a penitential season of the Church, Passiontide is evidently even more ancient than Lent. |
| Monday, Fifth Week of Lent |
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"Nor do I condemn you. You may go." (John 8:11)
Lenten Fact. In 1342, the Franciscans were appointed as guardians of the shrines of the Holy Land. The faithful received indulgences for praying at the following stations: At Pilate's house, where Christ met His mother, where He spoke to the women, where He met Simon of Cyrene, where the soldiers stripped Him of His garments, where He was nailed to the cross, and at His tomb. |
| Tuesday, Fifth Week of Lent |
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Because He spoke this way, many came to believe in Him. (John 8:30)
Lenten Fact. When the Moslem Turks blocked the access to the Holy Land, reproductions of the Stations of the Cross were erected at popular spiritual centers, including the Dominican Friary at Cordova and Poor Clare Convent of Messina (early 1400s); Nuremberg (1468); Louvain (1505); Bamberg, Fribourg and Rhodes (1507); and Antwerp 1520). Many of these stations were reproduced by renowned artists and are considered masterpieces today. |
| Wednesday, Fifth Week of Lent |
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"If you live according to my teaching, you are truly my disciples." (John 8:31)
Lenten Fact. St. Leonard Casanova (1676-1751) of Porto Maurizio, Italy, reportedly erected over 600 sets of the Stations of the Cross throughout Italy. |
| Thursday, Fifth Week of Lent |
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"I solemnly assure you, if a man is true to my word he shall never see death." (John 8:51)
Lenten Fact. In the early 3rd century, Lent was lengthened to 6 days. About 800 AD it was changed to 40 days. |
| Friday, Fifth Week of Lent Fridays of Lent are days of abstinence. |
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Lord of hosts, you who test the just, who probe mind and heart...to you I have entrusted my cause. (Jeremiah 20:12)
Lenten Fact. Wenceslaus, king of Bohemia, being seized with a malady which rendered it dangerous to his health to take Lenten diet, applied, in the year 1297, to Pope Boniface VIII., for leave to eat meat. The Pontiff commissioned two Cistercian abbots to inquire into the real state of the prince's health; they were to grant the dispensation sought for, if they found it necessary, but on the following conditions: that the king had not bound himself by a vow, for life, to fast during Lent; that the Fridays, the Saturdays, and the vigil of St. Mathias, were to be excluded from the dispensation; and, lastly, that the king was not to take his meal in presence of others, and was to observe moderation in what he took. |
| Saturday, Fifth Week of Lent |
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Jesus would die for the nationand not for this nation only, but to gather into one all the dispersed children of God. (John 11:51-52)
Lenten Question Q: Why do we fast and abstain during Lent? |
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Passion (Palm) Sunday
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Reflection. Lenten Fact According to the account of a fifth-century Spanish pilgrim to the Holy Land, Passion Sunday Mass was celebrated in Jerusalem at the Church of the Holy Sepulchre. After this the people were invited to meet again in the afternoon at the Mount of Olives, in the Church of Eleona (the grotto of the Our Father). They then proceeded to the Church of the Ascension for a service consisting of hymns and antiphons, readings and prayers, where at five o'clock in the afternoon the Gospel of the palms was read and the procession set out for the city. The people responded to the antiphons with the acclamation, "Blessed is He who comes in the name of the Lord," as we say even today. |
| Monday of Holy Week |
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Then she dried his feet with her hair, and the house was filled with the ointments fragrance. (John 12:3)
Reflection.
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| Tuesday of Holy Week |
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"I tell you solemnly, one of you will betray me!" (John 13:21)
Reflection.
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| Wednesday of Holy Week |
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I looked for sympathy, but there was none; for comforters, and I found none. (Psalm 69:21)
Reflection. My mom has prayed the daily rosary for as long as I can remember. We used to say it together as a family. At home, she always used a large wooden rosary she had owned for many years. The count of "Hail Marys" through five mysteries everyday was always accurate except for the third decade. Here, as my mom fingered the last "Hail Mary" bead, Sam would always say one more "Hail Mary" and naturally everyone would give the "Holy Mary" response. "There he goes again," she'd think to herself as he began the "extra" prayer. "Why does he always say eleven 'Ave Marias' in the third decade?" That pattern continued for several years until one day when my mom left her purse in the car and had to borrow a pair of rosaries from the lady sitting next to her. Lo and behold, this time when my mom fingered the final "Hail Mary" bead of the third decade, Sam dutifully followed with the "Glory Be." This prompted my mom to do something she otherwise wouldn't have thought of: to check the rosary beads in her purse - that set only contained nine beads in the third decade!
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| Thursday of Holy Week |
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"But if I washed your feet...then you must wash each others feet." (John 13:14)
Reflection.
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| Friday of Holy Week Good Friday Fast & Abstinence Today |
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Yet it was our infirmities that he bore, our sufferings that he endured. (Isaiah 53:4)
Reflection.
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| Saturday of Holy Week |
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"He has been raised up; he is not here." (Mark 16:6)
Reflection. THE CROSS The cross is the hope of Christians
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| Easter Sunday |
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On Easter Sunday, the Church is recollected in contemplation of the risen Christ. Thus she relives the primordial experience that lies at the basis of her existence. She feels imbued with the same wonder as Mary Magdalen and the other women who went to Christ's tomb on Easter morning and found it empty. That tomb became the womb of life. Whoever had condemned Jesus, deceived himself that he had buried his cause under an ice-cold tombstone. The disciples themselves gave into the feeling of irreparable failure. We understand their surprise, then, and even their distrust in the news of the empty tomb. But the Risen One did not delay in making himself seen and they yielded to reality. They saw and believed! Two thousand years later, we still sense the unspeakable emotion that overcame them when they heard the Master's greeting: "Peace be with you.'".... ...Christ's Resurrection is the strength, the secret of Christianity. It is not a question of mythology or of mere symbolism, but of a concrete event. It is confirmed by sure and convincing proofs. The acceptance of this truth, although the fruit of the Holy Spirit's grace, rests at the same time on a solid historical base. On the threshold of the third millennium, the new effort of evangelization can begin only from a renewed experience of this Mystery, accepted in faith and witnessed to in life.... Pope John Paul II
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