Saturday, April 30, 2011

Prayer of St. Gertrude the Great



Our Lord dictated the following prayer to St. Gertrude the Great to release 1,000 Souls from Purgatory each time it is said.

"Eternal Father, I offer Thee the Most Precious Blood of Thy Divine Son, Jesus, in union with the masses said throughout the world today, for all the holy souls in Purgatory, for sinners everywhere, for sinners in the universal church, those in my own home and within my family. Amen."

St. Gertrude's life was the mystic life of the Cloister – a Benedictine nun. She meditated on the Passion of Christ, which many times brought a flood of tears to her eyes. She did many penances and Our Lord appeared to her many times. She had a tender love for the Blessed Virgin and was very devoted to the suffering souls in Purgatory. She died in 1334. Her feast day is November 16th.

***Approval and recommendation (sgd.) M. Cardinal Pahiarca at Lisbon, Portugal, on March 4, 1936


Source: http://olrl.org/pray/stgertrude.shtml

Friday, April 29, 2011

The Greatness of the Image


+February 22, 1931
[Diary 47]
In the evening, when I was in my cell, I saw the Lord Jesus clothed in a white garment. One hand [was] raised in the gesture of blessing, the other was touching the garment at the breast. From beneath the garment, slightly drawn aside at the breast, there were emanating two large rays, one red, the other pale. In silence I kept my gaze fixed  on the Lord; my soul was struck with awe, but also with great joy. After a while, Jesus said to me, Paint an image according to the pattern you see, with the signature: Jesus, I trust in You. I desire that this image be venerated, first in your chapel, and [then] throughout the world.

[Diary 48]
I promise that the soul that will venerate this image will not perish. I also promise victory over [its] enemies already here on earth, especially at the hour of death. I Myself will defend it as My own glory.


Source: Diary, Divine Mercy in My Soul, by Saint Maria Faustina Kowalska, published by Marians of the Immaculate Conception. Stockbridge, MA 01263, USA, 4th Print 2005 ISBN 81-7109-594-1

3 O'Clock Prayer



"You expired Jesus,
but the source of life gushed forth for souls
and the ocean of mercy opened up for the whole world. 
O Fountain of life, Immeasurable Divine Mercy,
cover the whole world and empty
Yourself out upon us. 

O Blood and Water
which flowed out from the heart of
Jesus as a Fountain of mercy for us,
I trust in You!..

Holy God, Holy Mighty One,
Holy Immortal One,
have mercy on us and on the whole world (3x). Amen.
Jesus, King of Mercy we trust in You!"

Kindness


Kindness has converted more people to God than doctrine and learning and argument. None of these helped if they were not also kind.
   One of the greatest saints in the early church was St. Augustine. He was a very learned philosopher. We probably imagine that when the bishop St. Ambrose converted Augustine to Christianity, he must have had some very good philosophical arguments to prove his points. But that was not so. St. Augustine himself admits that it was the kindness of St. Ambrose which made him change his life... and none of the learning or arguments.
   Remember the "good" thief stealing heaven because he was kind to Jesus on the cross?

- F. W. Faber

Source: from the Book 1000 Stories you can use (Volume Two) by Frank Mihalic, SVD *917

Blessed are the Merciful


Jesus has given us a beautiful devotion to the Divine Mercy. But how can we expect mercy if we don't show mercy to others? 
Jesus has given us a command: 

 "Be merciful, just as your Heavenly Father is merciful." Forgive and you shall be forgiven.

Mercy is the perfection of love. What Jesus wants from us is that we love the same way that He has loved us. His love goes beyond forgiving our sins, He became the sacrifice that takes away our sins. As we love others, we must forgive them too, we must sacrifice our ego and become an expression of the love of God. 

John 13:34 "A new commandment I give unto you, that you love one another, even as I have loved you.

The love of God is unconditional love. For us, it means to be  prepared to love despite all the difficulties and sufferings involved in the manifestation of our love for others.

Our love must be a reflection of the Divine Love. We cannot love unless we forgive. The Lord says that we must forgive 70 times 7. 

It is by the measure of our love that we will be measured:
Luke 6:38 "Give, and it will be given to you; good measure, pressed down, shaken together, running over, they will pour into your lap. For by your standard of measure it will be measured to you in return." 

On the day of judgment, Jesus will recall our mercy to others: 

Matt 25:35-44 

35 'For I was hungry, and you gave Me something to eat; I was thirsty, and you gave Me drink; I was a stranger, and you invited Me in;

36 naked, and you clothed Me; I was sick, and you visited Me; I was in prison, and you came to Me.'

37 "Then the righteous will answer Him, saying, 'Lord, when did we see You hungry, and feed You, or thirsty, and give You drink?

38 'And when did we see You a stranger, and invite You in, or naked, and clothe You?

39 'And when did we see You sick, or in prison, and come to You?'

40 "And the King will answer and say to them, 'Truly I say to you, to the extent that you did it to one of these brothers of Mine, even the least of them, you did it to Me.'

Jesus has asked us to be merciful, he has promised us great rewards:

Matthew 5:7 Blessed are the merciful, for they shall obtain mercy.

Thursday, April 28, 2011

Unkindness Scars


   Molly had a fiery temper when she was a young girl. It often caused her to say of do unkind things. Finally, her father told her that for each thoughtless, mean thing she did, he would drive a nail into their gatepost. for each kindness, a nail would be pulled out.
   As the nails increased, getting them out became a challenge. Finally, the wished-for-day arrived - only one more nail! As her father pulled it out, Molly danced around proudly, exclaiming, "See, Daddy, the nails are all gone!"
   "Yes," agreed her father thoughtfully, "the nails are gone - but the scars remain."

- Lovasik

Source: from the Book 1000 Stories you can use (Volume Two) by Frank Mihalic, SVD *821

Wednesday, April 27, 2011

God's Abundant Answer to Prayer


   Years ago I lived in a small country town where i could never buy anything that would fit me. I used to send away occasionally to a large mail order house, and it would send me printed forms or order blanks. At the bottom of the order blanks were some such words as these, "If we do not have the article you ordered in stock, may we substitute?"
   Once I wrote, "yes," and the store sent me something that was worth double the price of the article i had ordered. I found that this particular firm made it a rule, if it could not supply the article ordered, to substitute one of a much better quality. Ever after that I printed it out boldly so they would understand it - "YES."
   When we pray to God, we had better put on the form that we are quite willing to let Him substitute. For every time He does, He sends us something far better than what we asked for, of thought we needed.

Source: from the Book 1000 Stories you can use (Volume Two) by Frank Mihalic, SVD *703

The Miraculous Conversion Story of Prisoner Claude Newman


The True Account of Prisoner Claude Newman (1944)

by John Vennari, from the March 2001 issue of “Catholic Family News.

”The following true story of Claude Newman took place in Mississippi in 1944. The account was told by Father O’Leary, a priest from Mississippi, who was directly involved with the events. He has left for posterity an audio recording it.

Claude Newman was a negro man who worked the fields for a landowner. He had married when he was 17 years old to a woman of the same age. One day, two years later, he was out plowing the fields. Another worker ran to tell Claude that his wife was screaming from the house. Immediately Claude ran into his house and found a man attacking his wife.

Claude  saw red, grabbed an axe and split the man’s head open. When they rolled the man over, they discovered that it was the favorite employee of the landowner for whom Claude worked. Claude was arrested. He was later sentenced for murder and condemned to die in the electric chair.

While he was in jail awaiting execution, he shared a cell-block of some sort with four other prisoners. One night, the five men were sitting around talking and they ran out of conversation. Claude noticed a medal on a string around another prisoner’s neck. He asked what it was, and the Catholic boy told him that it was a medal.



Claude said, “What is a medal?”


The Catholic boy could not explain what a medal was or what its purpose was. At that point, and in anger, the Catholic boy snatched the medal from his own neck and threw it on the floor at Claude’s feet with a curse and a cuss, telling him to take the thing.

Claude picked up the medal, and with permission from the prison attendants, placed it on a string around his own neck. To him it was simply a trinket, but he wanted to wear it.

During the night, sleeping on top of his cot, he was awakened with a touch on his wrist. And there stood, as Claude told the priest later, the most beautiful woman that God ever created. At first he was very frightened.

The Lady calmed down Claude, and then said to him, “If you would like Me to be your Mother, and you would like to be My child, send for a priest of the Catholic Church.” With that She disappeared. Claude immediately became terrified, and started to scream, “a ghost, a ghost”, and fled to the cell of one of the other prisoners. He then started screaming that he wanted a Catholic priest.

Father O’Leary , the priest who tells the story, was called first thing the next morning. He arrived and found Claude who told him of what had happened the night before. Then Claude, along with the other four men in his cell-block, asked for religious instruction, for catechism.

Initially, Father O’Leary had difficulty believing the story. The other prisoners told the priest that everything in the story was true; but of course, they neither saw nor heard the vision of the Lady. Father O’Leary promised to teach them catechism, as they had requested. He
went back to his parish, told the rector what had happened, and returned to the prison the next day to give instruction.

It was then that the priest learned that Claude Newman could neither read nor write at all. The only way he could tell if a book was right-side-up was if the book contained a picture. Claude had never been to school. And his ignorance of religion was even more profound. He knew nothing at all about religion. He did not know who Jesus was. He did not know
anything except that there was a God.

Claude began receiving instructions, and the other prisoners helped him with his studies. After a few days, two of the religious Sisters from Father O’Leary’s parish-school obtained permission from the warden to come to the prison. They wanted to meet Claude, and they also wanted to visit the women in the prison. On another floor of the prison, the Sisters
then started to teach some of the women-prisoners catechism as well.

Several weeks passed, and it came time when Father O’Leary was going to give instructions about the Sacrament of Confession. The Sisters too sat in on the class. The priest said to the prisoners, “Okay, boys, today I’m going to teach you about the Sacrament of Confession.”

Claude said, “Oh, I know about that!” “The Lady told me,” said Claude, “that when we go to confession we are kneeling down not before a priest, but we’re kneeling down by the Cross of Her Son. And that when we are truly sorry for our sins, and we confess our sins, the Blood He shed flows down over us and washes us free from all sins.”

Father O’Leary and the Sisters sat stunned with their mouths wide open. Claude thought they were angry and said, “Oh don’t be angry, don’t be angry, I didn’t mean to blurt it out.”

The priest said, “We’re not angry. We’re just amazed. You have seen Her again?”

Claude said, “Come around the cell-block away from the others.” When they were alone, Claude said to the priest, “She told me that if you doubted me or showed hesitancy, I was to remind you that lying in a ditch in Holland, in 1940, you made a vow to Her which She’s still
waiting for you to keep.” And, Father O’Leary recalls, “Claude told me exactly what the vow was.” This convinced Father O’Leary that Claude was telling the truth about his visions of Our Lady.

They then returned to the catechism class on Confession. And Claude kept telling the other prisoners, “You should not be afraid to go to confession. You’re really telling God your sins, not this priest, or any priest. We’re telling God our sins.” Then Claude said, “You know,
the Lady said [that Confession is] something like a telephone. We talk through the Priest to God and God talks back to us through the Priest.

About a week later, Father O’Leary was preparing to teach the class about the Blessed Sacrament. The Sisters were present for this too. Claude indicated that the Lady had also taught him about Holy Communion, and he asked if he could tell the priest what She said. The priest agreed immediately. Claude related, “The Lady told me that in Communion, I will only see what looks like a piece of bread. But She told me that THAT is really and truly Her Son. And that He will be with me just for a few moments as He was with Her before He was born in Bethlehem. And that I should spend my time like She did, in all Her time with Him, in loving Him, adoring Him, thanking Him, praising Him and asking Him for blessings. I shouldn’t be bothered by anybody else or anything else. But I should spend those few minutes with Him.”

Eventually they finished the instructions, Claude was received into the Catholic Church, and the time came for Claude to be executed. He was to be executed at five minutes after twelve, midnight.

The sheriff asked him, “Claude, you have the privilege of a last request. What do you want?”

“Well,” said Claude, “you’re all shook up. The jailer is all shook up. But you don’t understand. I’m not going to die. Just this body. I’m going to be with Her. So, can I have a party?”

“What do you mean?”, asked the sheriff.

“A Party!” said Claude. “Will you give Father permission to bring in some cakes and ice cream and will you allow the prisoners on the second floor to be turned loose in the main room so that we can all be together and have a party?”

“Somebody might attack Father,” cautioned the warden

Claude turned to the men who were standing by and said, “Oh no, they won’t. Will you fellas?”

So, the priest visited a wealthy patron of the parish, and she supplied the ice cream and cake. They had their party.

Afterwards, because Claude had requested it, they made a Holy Hour. The priest had brought prayer books from the Church and they all said together the Stations of the Cross, and a had a Holy Hour, without the Blessed Sacrament.

Afterwards, the men were put back in their cells. The priest went to the chapel to get the Blessed Sacrament so that he could give Claude Holy Communion.

Father O’Leary returned to Claude’s cell. Claude knelt on one side of the bars, the priest knelt on the other, and they prayer together as the clock ticked toward Claude’s execution.

Fifteen minutes before the execution, the sheriff came running up the stairs shouting, “Reprieve, Reprieve, the Governor has given a two-week reprieve!” Claude had not been aware that the sheriff and the District Attorney were trying to get a stay of execution for Claude to save his life.

When Claude found out, he started to cry.The priest and the sheriff thought it was a reaction of joy because he was not going to be executed. But Claude said, “Oh you men don’t know. And Father, you don’t know. If you ever looked into Her face, and looked into Her eyes, you wouldn’t want to live another day.”

Claude then said, “What have I done wrong these past weeks that God would refuse me my going home?” And the priest said that Claude sobbed as one who was brokenhearted.

The sheriff left the room.

The priest remained and gave Claude Holy Communion. Claude eventually quieted down. Then Claude said, “Why? Why must I still remain here for two weeks?”

The priest had a sudden idea. He reminded Claude about a prisoner in the jail who hated Claude intensely. This prisoner had led a horribly immoral life, and he too was sent to be executed. The priest said, “Maybe Our Blessed Mother wants you to offer this denial of being with Her for his conversion.” The priest continued, “Why don’t you offer to God every moment you are separated from Her for this prisoner so that he will not be separated from God for all eternity.”

Claude agreed, and asked the priest to teach him the words to make the offering. The priest complied. At the time, the only two people who knew about this offering were Claude and Father O’Leary.

The next day, Claude said to the priest, “That prisoner hated me before, but Oh! Father, how he hates me now!” The priest said, “Well, that’s a good sign.”

Two weeks later, Claude was executed.

Father O’Leary remarked, “I’ve never seen anyone go to his death as joyfully and happily. Even the official witnesses and the newspaper reporters were amazed. They said they couldn’t understand how anyone could go and sit in the electric chair actually beaming with happiness.”

His last words to Father O’Leary were, “Father, I will remember you. And  whenever you have a request, ask me, and I will ask Her.”

Two months later, the white man, who had hated Claude, was to be executed. Father O’Leary said, “This man was the filthiest, most immoral person I had ever come across.” His hatred for God, for everything spiritual,” said the priest, “defied description.”

Just before his execution, the county doctor pleaded with this man to at least kneel down and say the Our Father before the sheriff would come for him. The prisoner spat in the doctor’s face. When he was strapped into the electric chair, the sheriff said to him, “If you have something to say, say it now.” The condemned man started to blaspheme. All of a sudden the condemned man stopped, and his eyes became fixed on the corner of the room, and his face turned to one of absolute horror. He screamed. Turning to the sheriff, he then said, “Sheriff, get me a priest!”

Now, Father O’Leary had been in the room because the law required a clergyman to be present at executions. The priest, however, had hidden himself behind some reporters because the condemned man had threatened to curse God if he saw a clergyman at all.

Father O’Leary immediately went to the condemned man. The room was cleared of everyone else, and the priest heard the man’s confession. The man said he had been a Catholic, but turned away from his religion when he was 18 because of his immoral life. When everyone returned to the room, the sheriff asked the priest, “What made him change his mind?”

“I don’t know ” said Father O’Leary, “I didn’t ask him.”

The sheriff said, “Well, I’ll never sleep if I don’t.”

The Sheriff turned to the condemned man and asked, “Son, what changed your mind?”

The prisoner responded, “Remember that black man ­ Claude - who I hated so much? Well he’s standing there [he pointed], over in that corner. And behind him with one hand on each shoulder is the Blessed Mother. And Claude said to me, ‘I offered my death in union with Christ on the Cross for your salvation. She has obtained for you this gift, to see your place in Hell if you do not repent.’ I was shown my place in Hell, and that’s when I screamed.”

This, then, is the power of Our Lady.

Source: http://ourdivinemercy.multiply.com/journal/item/14

Tuesday, April 26, 2011

Saint Joseph Prayer



Saint Joseph whose protection is so great, so strong, so prompt before the Throne
of God, I place in you all my interests and desires . Oh Saint Joseph, do assist me
by your powerful intercession and obtain for me from your Divine Son, all spiritual
blessings through Jesus Christ, Our Lord; so that having engaged here below your
heavenly power, I may offer my thanksgiving and homage to the most loving of
fathers. Oh Saint Joseph, I never weary of contemplating you and Jesus asleep in
your arms. I dare not approach while He reposes near your heart. Press Him in my name and kiss His fine head for me, and ask Him to return the kiss when I draw my dying breath. Saint Joseph, Patron of the departing souls, pray for us. Amen.

*** 1900+ year old prayer !!! Promises are that anyone whoever hears this prayer or carries it will never die a sudden death, nor be drowned, nor will poison take effect on them. They will not fall into the hands of the enemy, nor be burned in any fire, and they will not be defeated in any battle.


Source: http://www.holysouls.com/stjosephstories.htm

Monday, April 25, 2011

Easter



   The news of Wellington's victory at Waterloo was brought by sailing ship to the south coast of England. From there by semaphore it was wig-wagged over land toward London. Finally the message reached the roof of Winchester Cathedral: "Wellington defeated."
   A heavy fog covered the landscape and the signals from view. The sad news was relayed to London, plunging the citizens into a deep gloom.
In a short time, the fog lifted and the remainder of the message came through: "Wellington defeated the enemy."
   Quickly the news raced on... lifting gloomy hearts from sadness to joy. Similarly, that is a picture of Good Friday's... Christ defeated"... to Easter's more complete: "Christ defeated the enemy."

- Tonne

Source: from the Book 1000 Stories you can use (Volume Two) by Frank Mihalic, SVD *743

Sunday, April 24, 2011

Communion, fasting and the Rosary

The Holy Virgin spoke of the Rosary being a powerful weapon along with the Eucharist and fasting:

“Little children, you should respond to the great gift that you have been granted.  Do not seek to find out what place you have in My plan but know that each one of you is irreplaceable in it. Do not allow yourselves to be held back by the unbelief of those who surround you. Be mirrors in which My image may be reflected.  There are moments when My adversary paralyzes you with distrust, when he sows doubts in your path.  Pray; do not allow anything to disturb the joy of surrendering your hearts, of consecrating yourselves daily to Jesus and to Me.  Your most powerful weapons are Communion, fasting and the Rosary.

Source: From the Book entitled "Praying the Rosary" @ http://loveandmercy.org/Eng-PR-Lg.pdf (The Messages of Jesus and the Virgin Mary to Catalina) or go to http://www.loveandmercy.org

The Empty Tomb


The Sunday Gospel [April 24, 2011 - Easter Sunday]

John 20:1-9

1On the first day of the week, Mary of Magdala came to the tomb early in the morning, while it was still dark, and saw the stone removed from the tomb. 2So she ran and went to Simon Peter and to the other disciple whom Jesus loved, and told them, “They have taken the Lord from the tomb, and we don’t know where they put him.” 3So Peter and the other disciple went out and came to the tomb. 4They both ran, but the other disciple ran faster than Peter and arrived at the tomb first; 5he bent down and saw the burial cloths there, but did not go in. 6When Simon Peter arrived after him, he went into the tomb and saw the burial cloths there, 7and the cloth that had covered his head, not with the burial cloths but rolled up in a separate place. 8Then the other disciple also went in, the one who had arrived at the tomb first, and he saw and believed. 9For they did not yet understand the scripture that he had to rise from the dead.

Reflection

“Peter and the other disciple went out and came to the tomb.” ~ v. 3

On this great feast of the Resurrection, let’s take a look at the first man to enter the empty tomb. Peter must have come there with many different feelings swirling in his heart – feelings ranging from hope that Jesus was alive again to guilt at having denied him.

Seeing those linens folded neatly, Peter probably recalled his own actions that brought Jesus to such end. “First I bragged about my undying loyalty to him, and then I betrayed him. If he really has been raised up, I have to face him. Jesus knows that I am a coward and a traitor. Will he even take me back?”

But while Peter’s view was so negative, Jesus had a different approach. He looked inside Peter’s heart and saw the love as well as the weakness. He knew that Peter had denied him only out of fear.

Imagine the first conversation between Peter and the risen Lord. “Jesus, why do you put up with me? I failed you!” “Peter, that’s all in the past. I know your heart, and I know your love. The Spirit is coming, and he will strengthen you beyond what you can imagine. So be at peace. I want you to feed my sheep.”

Surely we all have more than a little bit of Peter in us! Like him, we all have made boastful statements about our lives or about our faith at one time or another. And we all have been embarrassed when reality confronted these claims.

So what should we do this Easter? First, let’s give up all of our negative views about ourselves. “If God is for us, who can be against us?” (Romans 8:31). Second let’s listen to Jesus as he tells us that he knows how much we love him. Let’s allow these words to move us out into the world to feed his sheep. May we all have a blessed Easter.

“All praise to you, Lord Jesus! You have conquered sin and death. You have lifted me up to be with you forever!” Amen.

Credits: the WORD among us, April 2011

“Do not abandon yourselves to despair. We are Easter people and Hallelujah is our song.” ~ Pope John Paul II

Source: The Reflection is from Bro. Abel Navarro (you can visit his blog at http://myblogabelnavarro-abel.blogspot.com/).

Wednesday, April 20, 2011

Wonderful promise for those who pray the Rosary


“… Spread this devotion [the Rosary], 
because My Mother promised that if just one member of the family prays it every day, She will save that family.  And this promise is signed and sealed by the Divine Trinity."



Source: From the Book entitled "Praying the Rosary" (The Messages of Jesus
and the Virgin Mary to Catalina)
http://loveandmercy.org/Eng-PR-Lg.pdf
http://www.loveandmercy.org

Tuesday, April 19, 2011

The Power of "One" Hail Mary

HAIL, MARY, full of grace; the Lord is with thee; blessed art thou among
women, and blessed is the fruit of thy womb, Jesus. HOLY MARY, Mother of
God, pray for us sinners, now and at the hour of our death. Amen.

Millions of Catholics often say the Hail Mary. Some repeat it hastily not
even thinking on the words they are saying. These following words may help
some say it more thoughtfully. They can give God's Mother great joy and
obtain for themselves graces that she wishes to give them.

One Hail Mary well said fills the heart of Our Lady with delight and obtains
for us indescribably great graces. One Hail Mary well said gives us more
graces than a thousand thoughtlessly said.

The Hail Mary is like a mine of gold that we can always take from but never
exhaust. Is it hard to say the Hail Mary well? All we have to do is to know
its value and understand its meaning.

St. Jerome tells us that "the truths contained in the Hail Mary are so
sublime, so wonderful that no man or Angel could fully understand them."

St. Thomas Aquinas, the Prince of Theologians, "the wisest of Saints and
holiest of wise men," as Leo XIII called him, preached for 40 days in Rome
on the Hail Mary, filling his hearers with rapture.

Father F. Suarez, the holy and learned Jesuit, declared when dying that he
would willingly give all the many learned books he wrote, all his life's
labors, for the merit of one Hail Mary prayerfully and devoutly said.

St. Mechtilde, who loved our Lady very much, was one day striving to
compose a beautiful prayer in her honor. Our Lady appeared to her, with the
golden letters on her breast of: "Hail Mary full of grace." She said to her:
"Dearest, dear child, from your labor for no prayer you could possibly
compose would give me the joy and delight of the Hall Mary."

A certain man found joy in saying slowly the Hail Mary. The Blessed Virgin
in return appeared to him smiling and announced to him the day and hour that
he should die, granting him a most holy and happy death.

After death a beautiful white lily grew from his mouth having written on its
petals: "Hail Mary."

Cesarius recounts a similar incident. A humble and holy monk lived in the
monastery. His poor mind and memory were so weak that he could only repeat
one prayer which was the "Hail Mary." After death a tree grew over his grave
and on all its leaves was written: "Hail Mary."

These beautiful legends show us how much devotion to Our Lady was valued,
and the power attributed to the Hail Mary devoutly prayed.

Each time that we say the Hail Mary we are repeating the very same words
with which St. Gabriel the Archangel saluted Mary on the day of the
Annunciation, when she was made Mother of the Son of God.

Many graces and joys filled the soul of Mary at that moment.

Now when we say the Hail Mary we offer anew all these graces and joys to Our
Lady and she accepts them with Immense delight.

In return she gives us a share in these joys.

Once Our Lord asked St. Francis Assisi to give Him something. The Saint
replied: "Dear Lord, I can give You nothing for I have already given you
all, all my love."

Jesus smiled and said: "Francis, give Me it all again and again, it will
give Me the same pleasure."

So with our dearest Mother, she accepts from us each time we say the Hail
Mary the joys and delight she received from the words of St. Gabriel.

Almighty God gave His Blessed Mother all the dignity, greatness and holiness
necessary to make her His own most perfect Mother.

But He also gave her all the sweetness, love, tenderness and affection
necessary to make her our most loving Mother. Mary is truly and really our
Mother.

As children when in trouble run to their mothers for help, so ought we to
run at once with unbounded confidence to Mary.

St. Bernard and many Saints said that it was never, never heard at any time
or in any place that Mary refused to hear the prayers of her children on
earth.

Why do we not realize this most consoling truth? Why refuse the love and
consolation that God's Sweet Mother is offering us?

Is it our lamentable ignorance which deprives us of such help and
consolation.

To love and trust Mary is to be happy on earth now and afterwards to be
happy in Heaven.

Dr. Hugh Lammer was a staunch Protestant, with strong prejudices against
the Catholic Church.

One day he found an explanation of the Hail Mary and read it. He was so
charmed with it that he began to say it daily. Insensibly all his
anti-Catholic animosity began to disappear. He became a Catholic, a holy
priest and a professor of Catholic Theology in Breslau.

A priest was called to the bedside of a man who was dying in despair because
of his sins. Yet he refused obstinately to go to confession. As a last
recourse the priest asked him to say at least the Hail Mary after which the
poor man made a sincere confession and died a holy death.

In England, a parish priest was asked to go and see a Protestant lady who
was gravely ill, and who wished to become a Catholic.

Asked if she had ever gone to a Catholic Church, or, if she had spoken to
Catholics, or if she had read Catholic books? She replied, "No, no."

All she could remember was that------when a child------she had learned from
a little Catholic neighbor girl the Hail Mary, which she said every night.
She was Baptized and before dying had the happiness of seeing her husband
and children Baptized.

St. Gertrude tells us in her book, "Revelations" that when we thank God for
the graces He has given to any Saint, we get a great share of those
particular graces.

What graces, then, do we not receive when we say the Hail Mary while
thanking God for all the unspeakable graces He has given His Blessed Mother?


What the Saints Say About the Rosary and the Hail Mary


"Continue to pray the Rosary every day." Our Lady of Fatima to Lucia

"When you say your Rosary, the angels rejoice, the Blessed Trinity delights in it, my Son find joy in it too, and I myself am happier than you can possibly guess. After the Holy Sacrifice of the Mass, there is nothing in the Church that I love as much as the Rosary." Our Lady to Bl. Alan de la Roche

"‘Hail Mary, full of grace, the Lord is with thee!’ No creature has ever said anything that was more pleasing to me, nor will anyone ever be able to find or say to me anything that pleases me more." Our Lady to St. Mechtilde

What the saints have said about the Rosary and the Hail Mary. . .

"If you persevere in reciting the Rosary, this will be a most probable sign of your eternal salvation." Bl. Alan de la Roche

"The greatest method of praying is to pray the Rosary." St. Francis de Sales.

"When the Holy Rosary is said well, it gives Jesus and Mary more glory and is more meritorious than any other prayer." St. Louis de Montfort

"The Holy Rosary is the storehouse of countless blessing." Bl. Alan de la Roche

"One day, through the Rosary and the Scapular, Our Lady will save the world." St. Dominic

"Never will anyone who says his Rosary every day be led astray. This is a statement that I would gladly sign with my blood." St. Louis de Montfort

"If you say the Rosary faithfully unto death, I do assure you that, in spite of the gravity of your sins, 'you wil receive a never-fading crown of glory' (1 Peter 5:4)." St. Louis de Montfort

"The Rosary is THE weapon." Blessed Padre Pio

"You must know that when you ‘hail’ Mary, she immediately greets you! Don’t think that she is one of those rude women of whom there are so many - on the contrary, she is utterly courteous and pleasant. If you greet her, she will answer you right away and converse with you!" St. Bernardine of Siena

"Recite your Rosary with faith, with humility, with confidence, and with perseverance." St. Louis de Montfort

"The Rosary is my favourite prayer. A marvellous prayer! Marvellous in its simplicity and in its depth. . .the simple prayer of the Rosary beats the rhythm of human life." Pope John Paul II.

Source: http://www.holysouls.com/hailmary.htm

Monday, April 18, 2011

Forgiveness of God


   A missionary on one of the Pacific Islands was surprised one day to see a woman enter his hut carrying a handful of sand, which was still dripping water.

"Do you know what this is?" she asked.
"It looks like sand," replied the missionary.
"Do you know why i brought it here?" she asked.
"No, I can't imagine why" the padre answered.
"Well, these are my sins," the woman explained, "my sins which are as countless
as the sands of the sea. How can I ever obtain forgiveness for all of them?"
   "You got that sand down by the shore, did you not?" said the missionary.
"Well take it back there and pile up a heaping mound of sand. Then sit back and watch the waves come in and wash the pile slowly but surely and completely away. That is how God's forgiveness works. His mercy is a big as the ocean. Be truly sorry and the Lord will forgive."

Source: from the Book 1000 Stories you can use (Volume Two) by Frank Mihalic, SVD *729