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| | Headlines Lord, Teach Us to Pray. The Our Father is the Path to Communion with God By Deacon Keith Fournier | October 10, 2013 What Jesus is teaching is a Way of Life. We can have the same relationship Jesus has with the Father, the intimate communion the disciples witnessed when they came upon Him prayer. The same relationship they witnesses as they walked with Him daily. We also walk with Him daily.From this, and the other accounts of the same exchange, we have been given the beautiful form prayer we were taught as children. It is the prayer we pray at every Holy Mass, the Our Father. However, Jesus is teaching us all much more than one form of prayer, he is revealing to his friends and followers the relationship which is itself the very heart of prayer. Lord, Teach us to Pray. Continue Reading... THURSDAY HOMILY: Prayer Paves the Path to a New Way of Life By Deacon Keith Fournier | October 10, 2013 The intimate communion the disciples witnessed when they came upon Jesus in prayer can become our lived experience. Jesus reminds us we are adopted sons and daughters of His Father, who is now Our Father. (John 20:17). The instruction which they received as they walked with Him can be realized in our own lives if we learn how to walk with Him daily. The same Jesus who instructed the disciples is alive with us today. He has been raised from the dead. We need the eyes of faith to see Him - and the courage derived from faith to accompany Him. Through grace we are made capable of living an entirely new way of life, beginning right now. In the words of the Apostle Peter, we become partakers of the divine nature (2 Peter 1). All of this can be realized if we learn to pray. Continue Reading... The House of Harmony: Pope Francis on the Catholicity of the Church By Deacon Keith Fournier | October 10, 2013 During his Wednesday instruction, Pope Francis continued his series on the marks of the Church. He focused on what it means when we profess in the Creed that the Church is Catholic. He offered the sixty thousand pilgrims gathered in St. Peters Square some beautiful insights into the unity of the Church as it is found expressed within legitimate diversity. Pope Francis reminds us that to live in Jesus means to find our home in the Church, a House of Harmony in legitimate diversity. The Church is meant to become the home of the whole human race Continue Reading... Pope Francis Calls Christian Marriage a Vocation, Convenes Extraordinary Synod on the Family By Deacon Keith Fournier | October 10, 2013 Right before he boarded the plane to return to Rome from Rio de Janeiro Francis spoke to the young volunteers who had served at World Youth Day. He called them to follow the Lord and respond to their own vocation. Included in his understanding and explanation of what constitutes a vocation was Christian marriage and family life, alongside of priesthood, consecrated and religious life. He called them to all to be revolutionaries:God calls you to make definitive choices, and he has a plan for each of you: to discover that plan and to respond to your vocation is to move toward personal fulfillment. God calls each of us to be holy, to live his life, but he has a particular path for each one of us. Some are called to holiness through family life in the sacrament of Marriage God's Grace and the Atheist: Part II By Andrew M. Greenwell, Esq. | October 9, 2013 Supposing the Pope in his recent interview to Eugenio Scalfari published in the Italian paper La Repubblica stated that a non-believer, someone without faith in God, "could be" justified during his life and die in a state of sanctifying grace and therefore be saved, how does that square with Catholic doctrine? Continue Reading... I'm OK, You're Not So Hot: Relativism, Progressivism and the Collapse of Culture By Dr. Frederick Liewehr | October 9, 2013 Ultimately then, in order to be a progressive one must be an atheist. Without a belief in a moral code that is of divine origin, the progressive cannot logically justify his belief in "fairness", "human rights", or any of the other ideals he claims to espouse. Morality becomes simply a matter of opinion, and all opinions are equally valid. However, that position is untenable because he might get his nose punched, so he must substitute coercion, enforcement of his arbitrary new code, in order that people with varying opinions obey his precepts and become subordinate to his will. He must be in favor of hate speech laws, censorship of writing and the Internet, the "fairness" doctrine, marginalization of those who do not share progressive views, mandatory "sensitivity training", and so forth. Does this sound familiar? Continue Reading... Tuesday Homily: Choosing the Better Part By Fr. Roger J. Landry | October 8, 2013 To all of us in this frenetic era, who feel drawn-and-quartered by seemingly having to do so many things well at once, Jesus, with words shocking to our 21st century sensibilities, presents us today a summary of the Good News. He who came to set the captives free, who is the Truth incarnate, who knows everything and who cannot lie, tells us in one sentence, as he told Martha, the secret to our liberation: "You are worried and distracted by many things. Only one thing is necessary." The crucial question to be answered is, "What is that one thing?" Continue Reading... NO ENTRY FOR GAYS: Muslim countries to perform forced tests on tourists to determine if they're gay or not By Catholic Online (NEWS CONSORTIUM) | October 8, 2013 Kuwait is joining the list of Gulf states that is saying "no" to the entry of gays into the country. A medical test is being developed in that country to "detect gays" and will be the basis for barring some individuals from entry into the country. Continue Reading... Catholics Are Not Anti-Government: Government Shutdown - but Governing Continues By Deacon Keith Fournier | October 9, 2013 God has not willed to reserve to himself all exercise of power. He entrusts to every creature the functions it is capable of performing, according to the capacities of its own nature. This mode of government ought to be followed in social life. The way God acts in governing the world, which bears witness to such great regard for human freedom, should inspire the wisdom of those who govern human communities. They should behave as ministers of divine providence. (Catholic Catechism) Continue Reading...Most PopularObama's Campaign of Pain leaves families of fallen soldiers without deserved 'death gratuities' Read More How the Church Will Change: Evangelical Catholic Pope Francis Gives Another Interview Read More Insanity or is the Obama administration targeting Catholics: Priests who minister to troops during shutdown risk arrest Read More Guest Opinion: We Are Our Enemy. Catholics and the Cultural Decline Read More Oh come on! As a Catholic, can I still support Obamacare? Read More News | Catholic Life | PRWire | Encyclopedia | Bible | Prayers | Vocations | Saints & Angels © Copyright 2012 Catholic Online. This e-mail is never sent unsolicited. You have received this Catholic Online e-mail because you subscribed to it or someone forwarded it to you. To opt out, see the links below. TO ADVERTISE TO SUBSCRIBE Remove your e-mail address from our list. We respect your right to privacy. View our policy. This e-mail was sent by: Catholic Online, P.O. Box 9686 Bakersfield, CA 93389 USA | | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Apenas Para Falar de Mim Dividido Nunca, Dividir Jamais, Creio eu???Where's....m...!!!!
quinta-feira, 10 de outubro de 2013
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