World at Prayer blog
Reflections of Family and Faith
"The family that prays together stays together." - Venerable Patrick Peyton
Holy lives of inspiration | Learn more about our faith
In these days the Church invites us to reflect on readings from a set of books we rarely read from - the two Books of Maccabees! Our First Reading today is taken from the First Book of Maccabees. Set in the small city of Modein, the reading tells the powerful story of faith, zeal, and unwavering commitment to God’s covenant by the Jewish people in the face of intense religious persecution. King Antiochus Epiphanes wanted the Jewish people to abandon their ancestral religion and embrace foreign religions. Mattathias and his sons resisted the religious and cultural imposition. He led a fierce struggle for the Jewish people to stay with their religious beliefs, values, and practices.
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Holy lives of inspiration | Learn more about our faith
Mother St. Theresa of Calcutta once said; “God doesn't require us to succeed; he only requires that you try.” On my first time to visit United States thirty years ago, we had a provincial assembly at Notre Dame, the provincial at the time, what he asked me to do made me sit up straight. He invited me to give a talk to two hundred some American Holy Cross priests, about my experience as an indigenous Holy Cross living with American expatriates. Everything about me and within me was screaming, oh no, what am I going to say, will they even listen, I felt like telling him please save me from the embarrassment. One priest who realized my predicament, just told me Fulgens you can do it, try. I ended up powering through it well.
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Holy lives of inspiration | Learn more about our faith
One of the things that characterized Jesus' life was that he was about searching and saving lives. As we celebrate Mass today, we will discover that Saints Peter and Paul were also about searching and saving lives, as did Saint Rose Duchesne. Hopefully, in some small measure, we followers of Jesus seek to do the same. We heard the remarkable story of the encounter Jesus had with a man named Zacchaeus, who was small in stature, and climbed a tree to catch a glimpse of Jesus as he passed by. We were told that he was a tax collector, which meant he probably did not have too many friends among his acquaintances. However, what we needed to note was the sacrifice Zacchaeus made in climbing that tree. He was a professional and had a significant employment. He had to have been well-known, and yet here he was, willing to risk his professional standing, submit to ridicule from those who knew him.
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Holy lives of inspiration | Why pray?
I’d like you to imagine you’re on a dusty road near Jericho, or perhaps a road near where you live, and you encounter a man who is blind and forced to beg, sitting in the shadows, ignored or maybe even forgotten by those around him. Suddenly, a crowd stirs—Jesus of Nazareth is passing by! This man, though isolated by his blindness, doesn't hesitate or overthink the situation. Instead, he cries out, "Jesus, Son of David, have mercy on me!" Despite the crowd's rebukes to him, he shouts louder; his faith is unyielding. Jesus stops, calls him near, and asks, "What do you want me to do for you?"
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Family Rosary | pray the rosary
Emily Jaminet describes how her parents' tradition of a Sunday-night family Rosary inspired her to make the Rosary an integral part of her family prayer. And all day long, both at the temple and in their homes, they did not stop teaching and proclaiming the Messiah, Jesus. (Acts 5:42) I have a beautiful statue of Our Lady of Fatima in my family room. She watches over our family through every season and serves as a constant reminder of the maternal presence of Mary. A few years ago, I added a battery-operated candle with a timer. As the sun goes down, that gentle flicker draws our hearts to the Son of God and invites us to pray the Rosary.
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catholic family life | family prayer | pray the rosary
Whether you’ve prayed a few decades or simply held the beads on a hard day, you’ve already started retraining your mind toward peace one breath, one bead, one step at a time. Begin With Safety and Intentionality Before you even pick up your Rosary, pause. Notice your surroundings. Feel the floor under your feet, the weight of the beads in your hands. Signaling your brain: I am safe right now. Then take three deep, slow breaths - in through your nose, out through your mouth. Each exhale is an invitation for your body to release tension and your soul to receive grace.
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