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To: All
Catholic Culture

Daily Readings for: September 24, 2012
(Readings on USCCB website)

Collect: O God, who founded all the commands of your sacred Law upon love of you and of our neighbor, grant that, by keeping your precepts, we may merit to attain eternal life. Through our Lord Jesus Christ, your Son, who lives and reigns with you in the unity of the Holy Spirit, one God, for ever and ever.

Ordinary Time: September 24th

Monday of the Twenty-Fifth Week in Ordinary Time

Old Calendar: Our Lady of Ransom

This is my prayer to you, my prayer for your favor. In your great love, answer me, O God, with your help that never fails: rescue me from sinking in the mud; save me from my foes.

The Blessed Virgin appeared in 1218 in separate visions to St. Peter Nolasco, St. Raymond of Penafort and James, king of Aragon, asking them to found a religious order dedicated to freeing Christian captives from the barbarous Saracens or Moors, who at the time held a great part of Spain. On August 10, 1218, King James established the royal, military and religious Order of our Lady of Ransom (first known as the Order of St. Eulalia, now known as the Mercedarian Order), with the members granted the privilege of wearing his own arms on their breast. Most of the members were knights, and while the clerics recited the divine office in the commanderies, they guarded the coasts and delivered prisoners. This pious work spread everywhere and produced heroes of charity who collected alms for the ransom of Christians, and often gave themselves up in exchange for Christian prisoners. This feast, kept only by the Order, was extended to the whole Church by Innocent XII in the 17th century.


Our Lady of Ransom
Would you risk your life to free someone from a concentration camp? Would you take the place of a prisoner? Would you sacrifice comforts and even necessities to save a slave? Would you pray and do penance for the freedom of Christian captives?

These things were done by the followers of Christ from the earliest days, but especially during the Middle ages. At that time the enemies of Christ's Church had conquered a great part of Christian territory and had carried off into slavery many thousands of Christians. Hit and miss, though heroic, efforts to free these unfortunates had been made here and there.

The Church decided to organize the work of ransoming slaves. In 1198 St. John of Matha and St. Felix of Valois founded the Trinitarians. From then until 1787 they redeemed 900,000 captives. The Order of Our Lady of Ransom, called the Mercedarians, and founded by St. Peter Nolasco, ransomed 490,736 slaves between the years 1218 and 1632. St. Vincent de Paul, a slave himself, led his priests to save 1200 Christian captives in the short period between 1642 and 1660 at the staggering cost of 1,200,000 pounds of silver. An even greater achievement was the conversion of thousands in captivity, and steeling them against the sufferings of a cruel martyrdom for the faith.

All this has been admitted by a modern, competent Protestant historian, Bonet-Maury. He records that no expedition sent into the Barbary States by the powers of Europe or America equalled "the moral effect produced by the ministry of consolation, peace and abnegation, going even to the sacrifice of liberty and life, which was exercised by the humble sons of St. John of Matha, St. Peter Nolasco, and St. Vincent de Paul."

Our Blessed Mother herself appeared in a vision to St. Peter Nolasco, and requested him to found a religious order devoted to the rescue of captives. This was in 1218. Previous to that, since 1192, certain noblemen of Barcelona, Spain, had organized to care for the sick in hospitals and to rescue Christians from the Moors. St. Peter Nolasco, St. Raymond of Pennafort, and King James formed the new Order of Our Lady of Mercy. The group included religious priests who prayed and gathered the means, while the lay monks or knights went into the very camps of the Moors to buy back Christians, and, if necessary, take their very places. We have mentioned the magnitude of their success, a success that was won through the heavenly assistance of the Mother of Mercy, Our Lady of Ransom.

Excerpted from the Feasts of Our Lady by Fr. Arthur Tonne

Patrons: Barcelona, Spain; people named Clemency, Mercedes, Mercedez, Merced or Mercy.

Things to Do:


30 posted on 09/24/2012 8:22:40 PM PDT by Salvation ("With God all things are possible." Matthew 19:26)
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To: All
The Word Among Us

Meditation: Proverbs 3:27-34

 25th Week in Ordinary Time

“Do not withhold any goods when it is in your power to act.” (Proverbs 3:27)

So many things are not within our power. We are not likely to be able to cure cancer, eliminate hun­ger, or establish world peace. Even on a smaller scale, much is beyond our control. We can’t force feuding relatives to speak to each other. We can’t guarantee that our children will always make wise choices.

Since we can’t do everything, we are often tempted to give up and do nothing. But that’s not God’s way. Jesus invites us to put our mod­est lamp on a lamp stand. However much or little light it gives off, the world will still be a brighter place.

The writer of these proverbs knew how easy it is to procrasti­nate, to postpone responding to a request for help. There’s a reason that at Mass we ask God’s forgive­ness not only for the evil we have done but also for the good we have failed to do.

God is inviting each of us to move out of our comfort zone and take a small step, to focus on what we can do rather than on what is impossible for us. We can’t cure leukemia, but we may be able to donate blood. We can’t eliminate hunger, but perhaps we can invite the beggar at the door to share a meal at our table. We can’t negoti­ate world peace, but we can work at understanding the convictions of someone from a different culture, a different religion, or even a different political persuasion.

Such acts of love and mercy are most effective when they are rooted in prayer. When someone appeals to us for help, we may say: “I can’t do any more than pray for you.” That may be true, but it is not insignif­icant. Prayer is in fact the greatest thing we can do for a needy per­son. It puts him in touch with an unlimited resource, the God who made the universe and who loves each of his children unconditionally. Who knows? As we set our minds to praying for this person, God may show us something else we can do to be part of the answer to that prayer.

“Father, sometimes the needs in the world overwhelm me. Show me what I can do today to reach out to one of your precious children.”

Psalm 15:2-5; Luke 8:16-18


31 posted on 09/24/2012 8:25:44 PM PDT by Salvation ("With God all things are possible." Matthew 19:26)
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