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Daily Readings for: August 24, 2013
(Readings on USCCB website)

Collect: Strengthen in us, O Lord, the faith, by which the blessed Apostle Bartholomew clung wholeheartedly to your Son, and grant that through the help of his prayers your Church may become for all the nations the sacrament of salvation. 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.

RECIPES

o    Barbecued Lamb Steaks

o    Shaslick

o    White Gingerbread

ACTIVITIES

o    Apostle Cookies

o    Family and Friends of Jesus Scrapbook Album

o    What Role Do the Apostles Have in the Liturgy?

PRAYERS

o    The Immaculate Heart

Ordinary Time: August 24th

Feast of St. Bartholomew, Apostle

Old Calendar: St. Bartholomew; Our Lady Health of the Sick (Hist)

St. Bartholomew, a doctor in the Jewish law, was a dear friend of St. Philip the Apostle. Because Bartholomew was a man "in whom there was no guile," his mind was open to the truth. He went willingly with Philip to see Christ, and recognized the Savior immediately as the Son of God. After having received the gifts of the Holy Spirit on the first Pentecost, Bartholomew evangelized Asia Minor, northwestern India, and Greater Armenia. In the latter country, while preaching to idolaters, he was arrested and condemned to death.

Historically today is the feast of Our Lady Health of the Sick.


St. Bartholomew

In St. John's Gospel, Bartholomew is known by the name Nathaniel (the liturgy does not always seem aware of this identity). He hailed from Cana in Galilee, was one of the first disciples called by the Lord. On that initial meeting Jesus uttered the glorious compliment: "Behold, an Israelite indeed in whom there is no guile!" After the Resurrection he was favored by becoming one of the few apostles who witnessed the appearance of the risen Savior on the sea of Galilee (John 21:2). Following the Ascension he is said to have preached in Greater Armenia and to have been martyred there. While still alive, his skin was torn from his body. The Armenians honor him as the apostle of their nation. Concerning the fate of his relics, the Martyrology says: "His holy body was first taken to the island of Lipari (north of Sicily), then to Benevento, and finally to Rome on an island in the Tiber where it is honored by the faithful with pious devotion."

The Church of Armenia has a national tradition that St. Jude Thaddeus and St. Bartholomew visited the Armenians early in the first century and introduced Christianity among the worshippers of the god Ahura Mazda. The new faith spread throughout the land, and in 302 A.D., St. Gregory the Illuminator baptized the king of Armenia, Dertad the Great, along with many of his followers. Since Dertad was probably the first ruler to embrace Christianity for his nation, the Armenians proudly claim they were the first Christian State.

Excerpted from The Church's Year of Grace, Pius Parsch

Patron: bookbinders; butchers; cobblers; Forentine cheese merchants; Forentine salt merchants; leather workers; nervous diseases; neurological diseases; plasterers; shoemakers; tanners; trappers; twitching; whiteners; Gambatesa, Italy; Armenia.

Symbols: Flaying or tanner's knife and book; three vertical flaying or tanner's knives; human skin; human skin on a cross; devil under his feet; St. Matthew's Gospel; scimitar; cross;

Often Portrayed As: elderly man holding a tanner's knife and a human skin; skinless man holding his own skin.

Things to Do:


Our Lady, Health of the Sick

Our Lady Health of the Sick shrine is in the diocese of Michoacan, to the west of Mexico City. It was erected by the first bishop, the famous Vasco de Quiroga. The Indians of Michoacan, the Tarascans, were nomadic and impatient of all restraint.

The bishop, in whose hands the entire project of civilizing the people was placed, set up the means and paraphernalia of civilization: the Church, hospital, asylums, workshops and tools, and the framework of administration. He laid out a hundred towns in a planned economy. He took every precaution to assure equity and justice, and he worked to develop their love of one another as children of God. He taught them about their Holy Redeemer and about His blessed mother. He erected the shrine of Our Lady of Health, through whose intercession they were to strive for health of soul and health of body. Every advance they made in virtue, every effort toward decent habits of hygiene and sanitation they were to offer as flowers in a garland to La Purisima.

The statue which represented Our Lady of Health came from Europe. The Indians cherished it. They dressed it in elegant robes. They decorated it. They placed it in a chapel shrine. They duplicated it in the wood they carved out of trees. She became a favorite Madonna in western Mexico and northward into the United States. In many places throughout this great extent of territory she is skill a favorite Madonna. In some places her title has changed: In Chihuahua, Mexico, she is Our Lady of Chihuahua; in New Mexico, she is Our Lady of Santa Fe. The name has changed but the devotion and the statue are the same.


24 posted on 08/24/2013 2:29:53 PM PDT by Salvation ("With God all things are possible." Matthew 19:26)
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To: All
The Word Among Us

Meditation: John 1:36-51

Saint Bartholomew, Apostle

“Can anything good come out of Nazareth? (John 1:46)”

Have you ever had a lackluster first impression of someone who later became a very close friend? Somehow your eyes were opened to see the treasure within. At first Nathanael, better known as the Apostle Bartholomew, was less than impressed with the rural carpenter Philip wanted to introduce him to. He couldn’t imagine that the Messiah would come from such an insignificant town as Nazareth. But Jesus’ insight into Nathanael’s character melted his resistance. “Here is a true Israelite. There is no duplicity in him” (John 1:47). Jesus’ supernatural knowledge allowed Nathanael to see that this fellow was worth another look.

Jesus told Nathanael, “I saw you under the fig tree” (John 1:48). In Hebrew tradition, rabbis used to study the holy texts under the shade of a fig tree. It’s as if Jesus were saying that he knew Nathanael was pondering the Scriptures, maybe even praying in anticipation of the Messiah. To Nathanael’s credit, when Jesus revealed himself he didn’t cling to his own expectations of how this Messiah would appear. Instead, he opened himself up to the possibility that there was much more to Jesus than met the eye: “Rabbi,” he said, “you are the Son of God; you are the King of Israel” (1:49).

Occasionally, Jesus will break through our own expectations and show us something glorious about himself, another person, or even ourselves. Perhaps our co-worker shows real signs of holiness we had never seen before. Perhaps we catch a glimpse of the kind of person Jesus intends for us to be as we follow him. Or maybe we see Jesus in a new light as not only our judge but also our friend and companion.

When something like this happens, don’t dismiss it! God is trying to expand your vision. He wants to open your eyes to his presence, his goodness, and his grace. It’s all around you, just as the angels were all around Nathanael. Instead, open your eyes. Open your heart. Let Jesus’ veiled majesty move you, just as it moved Nathanael, to spread the news that Jesus is the Messiah.

“Come Holy Spirit, open my eyes to the glory of God that is all around me. Help me to see Jesus with the eyes of faith so that I can become his witness.”

Revelation 21:9-14; Psalm 145:10-13, 17-18


25 posted on 08/24/2013 2:36:13 PM PDT by Salvation ("With God all things are possible." Matthew 19:26)
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