God’s Voice is discrete, respectful, and humble…

Jesus@33

FRIDAY, JANUARY 6, 2023  

“God’s voice does not impose itself;

God’s voice is discreet, respectful – allow me to say, God’s voice is humble –

and, for that reason, produces peace.

and recognize the authentic desires the Lord has placed in our hearts.

Many times, it is not easy to enter into that peace of heart

because we are so busy with this, that and the other, the entire day…

But, please, calm yourself down a little bit, enter into yourself, within yourself.

Stop for two minutes.

Witness what your heart is feeling.

Let’s do this, brothers and sisters, it will help us so much

because at that moment of calm,

the Lord’s voice immediately tells, “Well, look here, look at that, what you are doing is good…”.

When we allow ourselves to be calm,

God’s voice comes immediately.

He is waiting for us to do this.”

 Pope Francis

Our relationship with God grows every day to greater friendship…

2019

THURSDAY, JANUARY 5, 2023 
 
“It is very beautiful to think of our life with the Lord as a relationship with a friend which grows day by day. Friendship with God. Have you ever thought about this? Yet, this is the way! Let’s think about God who gives us…doesn’t God give us so much? God loves us, He wants us to be his friends. Friendship with God changes the heart. Piety is one of the great gifts of the Holy Spirit, which gives us the ability to recognize God’s fatherhood.

We have a tender Father, an affectionate Father, a Father who loves us, who has always loved us. When we experience this, our hearts melt and doubts, fears, feelings of unworthiness are dissolved. Nothing can hinder this love that comes from being in contact with the Lord.”
Pope Francis

What can I do to feel stronger and healthier?

teresa

What Steps Can I Take Today to Feel Stronger and Healthier?
Your angels are stepping forward today to ask you to focus more on the here and now and on yourself for once. You have given up so much of your time to help other people. Isn’t it about time that you focused on just you?

So practically speaking, as well as eating well and adding plenty of fruit and vegetables to your diet, try to also cut down on alcohol. Get plenty of sleep each night too and try never to go to bed on an argument.
Life is too short for stressing, so make a point of surrounding yourself with excellent people who are on your wavelength. Anyone who isn’t in tune with you should really be avoided as much as possible for the sake of your health and happiness.

Self-care is a huge necessity in this day and age. It’s surprising how many people completely forget to add it into their daily routines. So, be one step ahead and focus on yourself so that you feel positively rejuvenated each and every day!

rochelle

This may sound crazy but remember to smile as often as possible. When you take delight in the little things, life just keeps on getting better and better. Listen to the guidance that is coming from your heart because this has angelic energy within it. The angels wish you to know that great times are ahead and that through focusing on yourself and on making positive healthy choices, you will feel better than you have done in a long time.
Also, remember to take regular breaks from whatever you are doing throughout the day whether you’re at home with the kids or out working your job. By taking regular time out, you’re getting that much needed recuperation period in order to feel stronger, happier, and certainly healthier!

Go- and make disciples of all nations… recognize the moments of grace… the shepherds are summoning you to step out and dirty your hands…

ng you

calm

Go therefore and make disciples of all nations (Mt 28:19).
 
“It is a request that the Lord makes to every Christian in every time. Jesus uses an easy and essential verb: ‘go’.
 
Some might think that to be a good Christian it is necessary above all to reflect, to meditate. Instead, Jesus says: Go! It is a decisive verb, because it transforms the disciple into an apostle, it makes him a missionary.
 
And you too, dear friends, are called to go, because God does not like it when we are lazy on the couch; He wants us on the move, on our way, ready and willing to put ourselves on the line.” 
Pope Francis

Brothers and sisters, if we are to welcome God and his peace, we cannot stand around complacently, waiting for things to get better. We need to get up, recognize the moments of grace, set out and take a risk. We need to take a risk! Today, at the beginning of the year, rather than standing around, thinking and hoping that things will change, we should instead ask ourselves: “This year, where do I want to go? Who is it that I can help?”
 
So many people, in the Church and in society, are waiting for the good that you and you alone can do, they are waiting for your help.
 
Today, amid the lethargy that dulls our senses, the indifference that paralyzes our hearts, and the temptation to waste time glued to a keyboard in front of a computer screen, the shepherds are summoning us to set out and get involved in our world, to dirty our hands and to do some good. They are inviting us to set aside many of our routines and our comforts in order to open ourselves to the new things of God, which are found in the humility of service, in the courage of caring for others.
 
Brothers and sisters, let us imitate the shepherds: let us set out with haste!
Pope Francis

You are my Family, Jesus!

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We sit at your table…

YOU

You
are my family…

You are my family,
Jesus!

We sit
at your table…

Listen
to your father.

Follow
His commands.

Bow to His
Glory!

Sing
to His name!

Glory
be to the Creator, Son and Spirit!

Alleluia! 

Strip your glory and humble yourself…..

DivaJeanne

Jeanne

“Who is Jesus?

Looking at the manger,

looking at the cross,

looking at his life,

his simplicity,

we can know who Jesus is”

the pope said.

Jesus is the son of God who saves us by becoming man,

stripping himself of his glory and humbling himself.” 

Pope Francis 

 Dec. 28, 2022

Phenomena that took place on this day…

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(Original Caption) Wounded Knee, South Dakota: View of the burial ground of the 1890 Wounded Knee Indian Massacre.

It was on this day in 1890 that federal troops killed almost 300 Lakota men, women, and children in the massacre at Wounded Knee. One of the survivors was Black Elk, the famous medicine man, who was 27 years old at the time of the massacre. He wrote: “… I can see that something else died there in the bloody mud, and was buried in the blizzard. A people’s dream died there. It was a beautiful dream. And I, to whom so great a vision was given in my youth, — you see me now a pitiful old man who has done nothing, for the nation’s hoop is broken and scattered. There is no center any longer, and the sacred tree is dead.”

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World War II, German forces began firebombing the city of London with such intensity that the fires that erupted became known as “The Second Great Fire of London.” Nearly one-third of the city was destroyed in mere hours, including 19 churches, 31 guildhalls, and all of Paternoster Row, the publishing center of London. Nearly 5 million books were destroyed. Some 1,500 fires were started by the high-explosive bombs; the timing of the air raid was carefully planned to coincide with low tide in the River Thames, which meant water was in short supply.
It was the 114th straight night of what was known as “The Blitz,” a systemic attack on London by Germany that began in September of 1940 and lasted until May of 1941. France, Belgium, Holland, and Norway had already fallen to Germany, and Adolf Hitler was determined to conquer Britain. The invasion was named “Operation Sea Lion,” but he underestimated the will of the British people, who had been stirred to determination by their new prime minister, Winston Churchill, who icily declared Britain would “never surrender.”
London schoolchildren practiced air raid drills by hiding beneath desks and pinning their hands over the backs of their necks. Wealthier citizens simply decamped to the countryside or bought steel “Anderson shelters,” which could be constructed in a backyard garden. The “Morrison shelter” was an iron cage that could double as an indoor table. Thousands of Britons with less money simply slept in the underground tube stations every night during the bombings.
The government didn’t like it, but they relented and brought in bunk beds and extra toilets. During the day, in the rubble, people on the street tacked up “Business as Usual” signs, joined the home guard, undertook fire-watching, and learned air raid precautions. Citizens were so resolute that journalist Edward R. Murrow, reporting from London, said, “Not once have I heard a man, woman, or child suggest that Britain should throw her hand.”
When the bombs began on December 29th, German observers on the French coast, nearly 100 miles away, watched as the night sky lit up. Both banks of the Thames were on fire. The fires stretched south from Islington to the edge of the St. Paul’s Cathedral churchyard, an area far greater than the first Great London fire of 1666. Winston Churchill ordered all available men to fight the fires outside St. Paul’s Cathedral in an effort to save the structure, which had been built by architect Christopher Wren after the previous cathedral had been destroyed in the 1666 fire. Wren was buried in the Cathedral.
A photographer named Herbert Mason was on top of the offices of the Daily Mail newspaper on Fleet Street when he took a picture of the cathedral with smoke and fire rising all around her. The photo became a symbol of Britain’s steadfast strength. The photo was called “War’s Greatest Picture.”
The Blitz lasted until May of 1941, when Hitler, who had vastly underestimated the resilience of Britain’s Royal Navy Air Force, turned his attention to the Soviet Union.
Britain never surrendered. In June of 1940, when he accepted the position of prime minister, Winston Churchill had declared: “Hitler knows that he will have to break us in this island or lose the war. If we can stand up to him all Europe may be free, and the life of the world may move forward into broad, sunlit uplands; but if we fail, then the whole world will sink into the abyss of a new Dark Age. Let us therefore brace ourselves to our duties and so bear ourselves that, if the British Empire and its Commonwealth last for a thousand years, men will still say: ‘This was their finest hour.’”
In the rubble of the Second Great Fire was discovered a Gothic doorway, a seventh-century arch, a Roman wall, and various Roman relics.
In 1944, the bells of St. Paul’s Cathedral rang out to celebrate the liberation of Paris.

We can improve our witness thru charity towards our brothers and sisters, fidelity to the Word of God, and forgiveness…

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“We can improve our witness through charity towards our brothers and sisters, fidelity to the Word of God, and forgiveness. Charity, Word, forgiveness. It is forgiveness that tells whether we truly practice charity towards others, and if we live the Word of God.
Forgiveness, is indeed as the word itself suggests, a greater gift, a gift we give to others because we belong to Jesus, forgiven by him. Let us think of our capacity to forgive, in these days in which perhaps we encounter, among the many, some people with whom we have not got along, who have hurt us, with whom we have never patched up our relationship.
 
Let us ask the newborn Jesus for the newness of a heart capable of forgiveness: the strength to pray for those who have hurt us and to take steps of openness and reconciliation. 
  
Pope Francis

Contemplate the great event: The Son of God born for us…

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TUESDAY, DECEMBER 27, 2022
 
“Like the shepherds of Bethlehem, surrounded by light, may we set out to see the sign that God has given us. May we overcome our spiritual drowsiness and the shallow holiday glitter that makes us forget the One whose birth we are celebrating. Let us leave behind the hue and din that deadens our hearts and makes us spend more time in preparing decorations and gifts than in contemplating the great event: the Son of God born for us.

Brothers and sisters, let us turn our eyes to Bethlehem, and listen to the first faint cries of the Prince of Peace. For truly Jesus is our peace. The peace that the world cannot give, the peace that God the Father has bestowed on humanity by sending his Son into the world. Saint Leo the Great summed up the message of this day in a concise Latin phrase: Natalis Domini, natalis est pacis: ‘the Lord’s birth is the birth of peace’.”
 Pope Francis

Contemplate the littleness…

by Shadra Strickland321779506_853618522591768_3859252203719345572_n

SUNDAY, DECEMBER 25, 2022
 
“Brothers and sisters, standing before the crib, we contemplate what is central, beyond all the pretty lights and decorations. We contemplate the child. In his littleness, God is completely present. Let us acknowledge this: “Baby Jesus, you are God, the God who becomes a child”. Let us be amazed by this scandalous truth. The One who embraces the universe needs to be held in another’s arms. The One who created the sun needs to be warmed. Tenderness incarnate needs to be coddled. Infinite love has a miniscule heart that beats softly. The eternal Word is an “infant”, a speechless child. The Bread of life needs to be nourished. The Creator of the world has no home. Today, all is turned upside down: God comes into the world in littleness. His grandeur appears in littleness.
 
To accept littleness means something else too. It means embracing Jesus in the little ones of today. Loving him, that is, in the least of our brothers and sisters. Serving him in the poor, those most like Jesus who was born in poverty. It is in them that he wants to be honoured. On this night of love, may we have only one fear: that of offending God’s love, hurting him by despising the poor with our indifference.”  
Pope Francis
 
 Today is Christmas Day, the day that Western Christians celebrate the birth of Jesus Christ.
The Christ Mass was first celebrated on December 25th in the year 336. Constantine was the first Roman emperor who professed to be a Christian, and he is the first to mark the holiday. There are a few theories about why this date was chosen. The Annunciation — which is the Angel Gabriel’s announcement to Mary that she had been chosen to bear Jesus, the Son of God — was traditionally celebrated at the spring equinox, around March 25.
For the first few centuries of Christianity, there was great resistance to observing the birth of Jesus Christ, or indeed any saint. Early Christians believed that birthdays should be mourned, not celebrated, because that is the day that people are born into their lives of suffering. Instead, Christians celebrated the day that a saint was martyred, because that was the day of their true birth into the spiritual realm. So people celebrated the Epiphany—the baptism of Jesus—and Easter — his death and resurrection — instead.

Christmas Light
by May Sarton


When everyone had gone

I sat in the library

With the small silent tree,

She and I alone.

How softly she shone!

And for the first time then

For the first time this year,

I felt reborn again,

I knew love’s presence near.

Love distant, love detached

And strangely without weight,

Was with me in the night

When everyone had gone

And the garland of pure light

Stayed on, stayed on.


“Christmas Light” by May Sarton from Collected Poems. © Norton, 1993.

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