The attack on marriage is really an attack on the human person, and his dignity, for the devil seeks to pervert our true purpose, to pervert God's holy design. For many of us, we cannot march in protests or write dozens of letters or call numerous times to urge legislators to vote for the Truth. But one thing we can all do is pray and fast. We have designated one day each week to fast for these intentions:

1. That marriage may be preserved, promoted, and understood as God's plan for creation.

2. For all marriages that they may reflect the love of the Trinity.

3. For broken marriages that Christ bring healing and conversion to the spouses' souls.

4. For those who are married, for the sanctification of their marriage and their spouse. For those who are single, for their future spouse and vocation.


Thursday, April 30, 2020

May 1 Fast

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JMJ


"It is tender, that is, full of confidence in her, like a child's confidence in his loving mother. This confidence makes the soul have recourse to her in all its bodily and mental necessities, with much simplicity, trust and tenderness. . . 
This devotion to Our Lady is holy: that is to say, it leads the soul to avoid sin and imitate the virtues of the Blessed Virgin, particularly her profound humility, her lively faith, her blind obedience, her continual prayer, her universal mortification, her divine purity, her ardent charity, her heroic patience, her angelic sweetness and her divine wisdom. These are the ten principal virtues of the most holy Virgin." 
(True Devotion, St. Louis de Montfort)
Separation from a loved one either deepens or dulls desire.  The oft-quoted cliche that "absence makes the heart grow fonder" is not a steadfast rule; rather it is absence that reveals either sincere fidelity or hidden apathy.  When separation is unavoidable, one's true devotion is shown by how he fills the void during the indefinite wait for the return of the Beloved.  An interminable interval can invite anxiety and idleness, but unlike the foolish virgins in the parable, one must prepare himself for the return of the bridegroom since He will come at an unexpected hour.  Rather than fill the void with empty diversions, one can increase his prayer and fasting to sharpen his hunger to once again receive His Beloved.

It is here that one can look to Our Lady's example as she waited with eager expectation for the coming of the Messiah.  Mary did not wait in sloth and indolence, but in fervent prayer and industry; for even had she known that she would be asked to be the Mother of the Messiah, she would have still performed the same mundane daily tasks with diligence and patience. As Our Lord sanctified work by laboring himself; so too, Our Lady ennobled the role of a handmaid by her ardent desire to serve, even those who were not graced as she was. 

Let us turn to Our Lady during this, her month, asking her help to imitate her so that like Venerable Teresita Quevado, we may say to Mary: "Let all who look at me, see you."



Thursday, April 2, 2020

April 3rd Fast

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JMJ

He who dwells in the shelter of the Most High
Who abides in the shadow of the Almighty,
Will say to the Lord, “My refuge and my fortress;
My God, in whom I trust.”

For he will deliver you from the snare of the fowler
And from the deadly pestilence;
He will cover you with His pinions,
And under His wings you will find refuge;

His faithfulness is a shield and buckler.
You will not fear the terror of the night,
Nor the arrow that flies by day,
Nor the pestilence that stalks in darkness,
Nor the destruction that wastes at noonday.

A thousand may fall at your side,
Ten thousand at your right hand;
But it will not come near you.
You will only look with your eyes
And see the recompense of the wicked.

Because you have made the Lord your refuge,
The Most High your habitation,
No evil shall befall you,
No scourge come near your tent.

For He will give His angels charge over you
To guard you in all your ways.
On their hands they will bear you up,
Less you dash your foot against a stone.

You will tread on the lion and the adder
The young lion and the serpent
You will trample under foot.

Because He cleaves to me in love,
I will deliver him;
I will protect Him, because He knows my name.

When He calls to me, I will answer Him;
I will be with him in trouble,
I will rescue him and honor him.
With long life I will satisfy him
And show him my salvation.
(Psalm 91) 
There are intense periods that exist in the course of one's lifetime that have definitive beginnings and endings: a stressful project for work, pregnancy and subsequent labor, a grueling training, an arduous school term, etc. Despite the toil and difficulties that arise from these situations, their characteristic finiteness enable the sufferer to endure any hardships with persevearance, encouraged by the knowledge that their labors will soon produce tangible fruit.  
However, there are other intervals that may confront a person-i.e. long illness, a job loss, or perhaps the discernment of one's vocation- whose very indeterminate nature severely tests his patience, generating anxiety and frustration as he fumbles his way through the unknown darkness before him. After Our Lord died on Good Friday, the Apostles similarly faced an uncertain future, bereft of the Light that illuminated the World, plunged into the darkness that blanketed the earth.  
But Christians have the blessed knowledge that the Apostles did not; that the time of suffering did end, and Our Lord gloriously did rise on Easter Sunday.  So too, the duration of any trial, despite its indefiniteness, will reach its conclusion    eventually.  And often, when one looks back at his trial, he will see that it was the preparatory climb to the summit he has finally gained.  To endure this present cross, then, he must recognize it as a merciful opportunity, one to be seized for fruitful growth and not wasted with useless worry.  Trust and have confidence in the Saving Sacrifice of the Cross! 
"O Blood and Water  
which gushed forth from the Heart of Jesus 
as a Fountain of Mercy, I Trust in You."