Deliverance Ministries - They are not for everyone and are Dangerous

Deliverance ministries are very common now especially in the Charismatic Renewal.  I would say that people should stay clear of those who are not acting alongside the Church with a spiritual director Priest.  

It is highly irresponsible and dangerous for people especially for those with emotional problems to start praying deliverance prayers themselves or with others.  You cannot enter a deliverance ministry yourself without proper authority and guidance.  And if you have emotional problems you should definitely not be dabbling in this.

Please be careful and go and ask the advice of a good and holy Priest, one who is wise in these areas.  It is important to remember that we have the Sacraments but somehow we have lost faith in the power of them.  Open your whole heart in Confession, go regularly even every week if you have to. Receive Jesus Christ in Holy Communion and pray to Him in Adoration. Learn to praise God in everything.  Pray to forgive all those who hurt you and also for forgiveness towards yourself. Pray to Our Lady.

Just a note on a lady called Betty Brennan who was a former satanist and who returned to her Catholic faith through the Sacraments of the Church.  She puts her whole emphasis on the power of the Sacraments, and not on having  deliverance prayers.  That is coming from someone who was directly involved with the occult.  I attach a link to her testimony here:  Betty Brennan Former satanist becomes Catholic

Homily of Pope Benedict XVI (now Pope Emeritus) from Holy Thursday 2012


Dear Brothers and Sisters!

Holy Thursday is not only the day of the institution of the Most Holy Eucharist, whose splendour bathes all else and in some ways draws it to itself. To Holy Thursday also belongs the dark night of the Mount of Olives, to which Jesus goes with his disciples; the solitude and abandonment of Jesus, who in prayer goes forth to encounter the darkness of death; the betrayal of Judas, Jesus’ arrest and his denial by Peter; his indictment before the Sanhedrin and his being handed over to the Gentiles, to Pilate. Let us try at this hour to understand more deeply something of these events, for in them the mystery of our redemption takes place.
Jesus goes forth into the night. Night signifies lack of communication, a situation where people do not see one another. It is a symbol of incomprehension, of the obscuring of truth. It is the place where evil, which has to hide before the light, can grow. Jesus himself is light and truth, communication, purity and goodness. He enters into the night. Night is ultimately a symbol of death, the definitive loss of fellowship and life. Jesus enters into the night in order to overcome it and to inaugurate the new Day of God in the history of humanity.

On the way, he sang with his Apostles Israel’s psalms of liberation and redemption, which evoked the first Passover in Egypt, the night of liberation. Now he goes, as was his custom, to pray in solitude and, as Son, to speak with the Father. But, unusually, he wants to have close to him three disciples: Peter, James and John. These are the three who had experienced his Transfiguration – when the light of God’s glory shone through his human figure – and had seen him standing between the Law and the Prophets, between Moses and Elijah. They had heard him speaking to both of them about his “exodus” to Jerusalem. Jesus’ exodus to Jerusalem – how mysterious are these words! Israel’s exodus from Egypt had been the event of escape and
liberation for God’s People. What would be the form taken by the exodus of Jesus, in whom the meaning of that historic drama was to be definitively fulfilled?

The disciples were now witnessing the first stage of that exodus – the utter abasement which was nonetheless the essential step of the going forth to the freedom and new life which was the goal of the exodus. The disciples, whom Jesus wanted to have close to him as an element of human support in that hour of extreme distress, quickly fell asleep. Yet they heard some fragments of the words of Jesus’ prayer and they witnessed his way of acting. Both were deeply impressed on their hearts and they transmitted them to Christians for all time. Jesus called God “Abba”. The word means – as they add – “Father”. Yet it is not the usual form of the word “father”, but rather a children’s word – an affectionate name which one would not have dared to use in speaking to God. It is the language of the one who is truly a “child”, the Son of the Father, the one who is conscious of being in communion with God, in deepest union with him.

If we ask ourselves what is most characteristic of the figure of Jesus in the Gospels, we have to say that it is his relationship with God. He is constantly in communion with God. Being with the Father is the core of his personality. Through Christ we know God truly. “No one has ever seen God”, says Saint John. The one “who is close to the Father’s heart … has made him known” (1:18). Now we know God as he truly is. He is Father, and this in an absolute goodness to which we can entrust ourselves. The evangelist Mark, who has preserved the memories of Saint Peter, relates that Jesus, after calling God “Abba”, went on to say: “Everything is possible for you. You can do all things” (cf. 14:36). The one who is Goodness is at the same time Power; he is all-powerful. Power is goodness and goodness is power. We can learn this trust from Jesus’ prayer on the Mount of Olives.

Before reflecting on the content of Jesus’ petition, we must still consider what the evangelists tell us about Jesus’ posture during his prayer. Matthew and Mark tell us that he “threw himself on the ground” (Mt 26:39; cf. Mk 14:35), thus assuming a posture of complete submission, as is preserved in the Roman liturgy of Good Friday. Luke, on the other hand, tells us that Jesus prayed on his knees. In the Acts of the Apostles, Mount of Olives. When menaced by the power of evil, as they kneel, they are upright before the world, while as sons and daughters, they kneel before the Father. Before God’s glory we Christians kneel and acknowledge his divinity; by this posture we also express our confidence that he will prevail.

Jesus struggles with the Father. He struggles with himself. And he struggles for us. He experiences anguish before the power of death. First and foremost this is simply the dread natural to every living creature in the face of death. In Jesus, however, something more is at work. His gaze peers deeper, into the nights of evil. He sees the filthy flood of all the lies and all the disgrace which he will encounter in that chalice from which he must drink. His is the dread of one who is completely pure and holy as he sees the entire flood of this world’s evil bursting upon him. He also sees me, and he prays for me. This moment of Jesus’ mortal anguish is thus an essential part of the process of redemption. Consequently, the Letter to the Hebrews describes the struggle of Jesus on the Mount of Olives as a priestly event. In this prayer of Jesus, pervaded by mortal anguish, the Lord performs the office of a priest: he takes upon himself the sins of humanity, of us all, and he brings us before the Father.

Lastly, we must also pay attention to the content of Jesus’ prayer on the Mount of Olives. Jesus says: 14:36). The natural will of the man Jesus recoils in fear before the enormity of the matter. He asks to be spared. Yet as the Son, he places this human will into the Father’s will: not I, but you. In this way he transformed the stance of Adam, the primordial human sin, and thus heals humanity. The stance of Adam was: not what you, O God, have desired; rather, I myself want to be a god. This pride is the real essence of sin. We think we are free and truly ourselves only if we follow our own will. God appears as the opposite of our freedom. We need to be free of him – so we think – and only then will we be free. 
“Father, for you all things are possible; remove this cup from me; yet not what I want, but what you want” (Mk
he speaks of the saints praying on their knees: Stephen during his stoning, Peter at the raising of someone who had died, Paul on his way to martyrdom. In this way Luke has sketched a brief history of prayer on one’s knees in the early Church. Christians, in kneeling, enter into Jesus’ prayer on the

This is the fundamental rebellion present throughout history and the fundamental lie which perverts life. When human beings set themselves against God, they set themselves against the truth of their own being and consequently do not become free, but alienated from themselves. We are free only if we stand in the truth of our being, if we are united to God. Then we become truly “like God” – not by resisting God, eliminating him, or denying him. In his anguished prayer on the Mount of Olives, Jesus resolved the false opposition between obedience and freedom, and opened the path to freedom. Let us ask the Lord to draw us into this “yes” to God’s will, and in this way to make us truly free. Amen.


Habemus Papam




Our new Holy Father, Pope Francis.  Argentinian Cardinal Jorge Mario Bergoglio, Jesuit, 76 years old has become the new Vicar of Christ this evening 13th March 2013.  A man of deep humility and simplicity asked for prayers for Benedict XVI and prayer for himself as he now takes on this heavy Cross to lead the Catholic Church in these most turbulent times.  As he asked for prayers for himself, a great silence descended on the whole of St. Peters.  It was so emotional, a beautiful moment.  We pray for our Holy Father and we continue to pray also for Benedict XVI.  May the Lord bless and protect them both.

Let us also be watchful and discerning and keep our eyes always on the Lord and remember the True Presence of Jesus Christ in the Holy Eucharist and the Sacredness and Beauty of the Holy Mass and the beauty of the Vocation to the Priesthood.  Let us pray for all our Priests, Bishops and Cardinals also at this time of change.   The Lord is in charge and He will look after us always.  Jesus Divine Mercy, Mary Mother of the Church, protect us and our Holy Father and all the Church at this time.  Holy Saints and Martyrs pray for us.  St. Joseph, Patron of the Universal Church pray for us.  Let us be greatly vigilant in prayer in the days ahead and prepare well for this Divine Mercy on April 7th 2013.

Pray for the Cardinals and Conclave....

We pray for all the Cardinals now as they discuss various issues within the Church and the date for the Conclave.

Some of my own favourites would be Cardinal Marc Oullet of Canada, Cardinal Malcolm Ranjith of Sri Lanka, Cardinal Angelo Bagnasco of Italy, Cardinal Mauro Piacenza of Italy and Cardinal Francis Arinze of Nigeria.  But of course there are many others, but they spring to mind.  At the end of the day it is the Holy Spirit who will guide the Cardinals in voting for the new Holy Father.  We pray that they remain open to the guidance of the Holy Spirit and close to the Hearts of Jesus and Mary at this time.  St. Joseph, Patron of the Church pray for all our Cardinals and the whole Church at this time.  Let us also remember daily Benedict XVI, now Pope Emeritus in his retirement who asked us to pray for him each day.  May the Lord bless him abundantly for all he has done for our Church and for what he continues to do.




Pope Benedict XVI, final farewell as Holy Father. May God bless him for all he has done for us.

Thousands visit St. John Bosco Relics in Liverpool


MORE than 1,000 people flocked to Liverpool’s Metropolitan cathedral to see the relics of a saint behind one of the city’s biggest youth movements.

The right hand of Don Bosco, an Italian priest who founded the worldwide Salesian System after working with homeless young people in his home city of Turin, was on display at the cathedral until 5pm Monday 7th January 2013. 

'Visionaries' in Ireland (3) - Priest speaks on The Warning Second Coming Revelations from anonymous visionary ''Maria Divine Mercy'

Fr. Owen Gorman who writes for the Alive newspaper in Ireland wrote this article in March 2012 on the 'Warning Second Coming'  which is based on supposed revelations from an anonymous Irish visionary calling herself 'Maria Divine Mercy'.  Below is his article: 

Many faithful Christians at present believe that the world has gotten so bad that God will intervene directly in human affairs to bring us to our senses. Something big will happen, they say, and soon!

This view is central to a website, ‘the warning second coming’, that is popular with some Catholics. It is associated with an anonymous‘European seer’ who goes by the name, ‘Maria Divine Mercy’.

The website claims that since November 2010, ‘Maria’ has been receiving messages from God the Father, Jesus and Our Lady. They speak of a worldwide warning from God, the need for conversion and the Second Coming of Christ.

In judging private revelations, the Church rightly proceeds with great caution. If any “revelation” contains a substantive doctrinal or moral error it can be dismissed as being ‘not of supernatural origin’.

Applying this standard to ‘Maria Divine Mercy’, we find a number of doctrinal errors in her writings. Here are sample messages followed by responses based on Church teaching:

(1) Message (20 May 2011):
Many people believe that My Second Coming indicates that the end of the world has come.
This is not the case, for instead, it will mean the End Times when Satan and his followers will be banished from earth for 1000 years.

Response: This “message” contradicts Church teaching, where the Second Coming will indeed mean that the end of the world has come. Our Lord’s Second Coming will signal that the history of the world has run its course.

The earth and the cosmos will be renewed and evil will no longer tarnish God’s creation. The ‘new heavens and the new earth’ and the renewed creation will be free from Satan’s power not for 1000 years, but forever.

 (2) Message (7 May 2011):
My Passion the Cross and the atrocities committed by man at My crucifixion have not been revealed to the world in the way they were meant to be.

Response: The revelation of Jesus’ passion is found in the four Gospels, which are inspired by God.  
To claim that the events around Jesus’ crucifixion have not been revealed as they were meant to be belittles Biblical revelation. It implies that the Gospel accounts are defective.
But this cannot be, for God Himself is the author of Scripture which manifests his mind and will. Maria Divine Mercy has not got this point right. Is anyone sniffing heresy?

(3) Message (31 January2012):  I grant them [my disciples] [a] plenary indulgence to enable them carry My torch of fire so that they can spread conversion. They must say this prayer for seven consecutive days and they will be given the gift of total absolution and the power of the Holy Spirit.

Response: 
Private revelations often contain promises of special rewards for faithful
followers. But there are two big problems here.

(a) Jesus does not grant plenary indulgences. He has delegated the dispensing of
indulgences to Church authorities. They decide what pious practices merit a plenary indulgence, and the conditions.

(b) total absolution of sins comes through the sacrament of penance, not from reciting
a particular prayer over a 7-day period, however meritorious that prayer may be.

This small sampling of messages should make it clearthat the views on the ‘warning’ website contain serious doctrinal errors and are not a reliable guide to the Catholic faith. 

Above from March 2012 edition of Alive Newspaper link here:  Alive - Fr. Owen Gorman on Warning Second Coming

'Visionaries' in Ireland (2) - Direction for our Times (ann lay apostle) and what Fr. Kevin Scallon and Sr. Briege McKenna now say

Fr. Kevin Scallon who works with Sr. Briege McKenna with the Intercession for Priests has stated the following on the work of the group calling itself 'Direction for our times' which is led by a lady calling herself 'anne the lay apostle'.

"Recent information has caused me to question the authenticity of Direction for our Times.  Regretfully I have come to discern that I can no longer support or encourage involvement in this organisation."

You can find this statement on their website link here;  Intercession for Priests

And Sr. Briege McKenna has also issued her statement on her website http://www.sisterbriege.com/
where she states that

"It is with regret that I have discerned the need to withdraw my endorsement and support for Direction for our Times.  I am praying that God's will be done on earth as it is in Heaven."


Another article on this movement can be found on Catholic Lane website link here : Catholic Lane - Deception for our Times



'Visionaries' in Ireland (1) - Two Dioceses Response on House of Prayer, Achill, Ireland & Austin, Texas, USA

From the Archdiocese of Tuam website, link below.
House of Prayer – Achill
December 1, 2009

Many calls and letters have come to the Diocesan Office regarding the work termed the “House of Prayer” in Achill, Co. Mayo. The Archbishop originally issued two public statements in this regard, in December 1997 and July 1998 respectively.  These are included on the link below.  While wishing to entirely respect the reputations of all involved, the Archdiocese cannot but recall that sincere and well-ordered attempts on the part of the diocesan authorities to integrate this work into the life of the local church here met with a disappointing lack of success.  

Accordingly, while welcoming any and all sincere attempts to promote orthodox Catholic faith and piety, the Archdiocese cannot lend its approval to this work as matters stand and is obliged to note that the same work is entirely of a private nature and carries no ecclesiastical approval whatever.  The Archbishop would call on all persons of good will involved in the situation to reflect on what is best for the Church at large and to exercise the greatest responsibility and charity in the matter.

Link to further documents on this:  Tuam Archdiocese - House of Prayer, Achill



Leander prayer house, Austin, Texas, USA
Our Lady Queen of Peace House of Prayer, scheduled to open on June 23 2006 at 23700 Nameless Road in Leander, is doing so without the approval of Bishop Aymond. It should NOT be considered as sanctioned by the Catholic Church. Chancery officials have received several inquiries about its legitimacy and others have expressed concern regarding the situation.

The house of prayer is associated with Ms. Christina Gallagher of the Tuam Archdiocese in Ireland. The Tuam Archdiocese does not recommend her or the House of Prayer as credible. We have also been informed that Father Gerald McGinnity, a priest of the Armaugh Archdiocese in Ireland, will accompany Ms. Gallagher to Austin. Father McGinnity has not been given permission to celebrate Mass at the House of Prayer and will not have faculties from the Austin Diocese to serve in any ministerial capacity.



Holy Innocents - 28th December

On this the Feast of the Holy Innocents, we remember the sanctity of life from the moment of conception.  We remember all those killed in abortion and in infanticide.
Go to:  Life is Sacred


Doctors speak out for Life Ireland


Maria Coleman had just started medicine at the Royal College of Surgeons when she became pregnant through difficult circumstances. Canadian by birth, she grew up in a culture where abortion is available on demand up to full term.
The 24-year-old went to her GP and was told that abortion was the best route to take; that having a baby would mess up her career. Maria was surprised. It was the sort of reaction she expected from a Canadian doctor, not an Irish one.
By that point she had made her mind up anyway. That happened the moment she did a pregnancy test.
"From the second it showed positive, I knew there was another life growing inside me," she recalls.
"There was no denying that. As easy as it might have seemed to get rid of the 'problem', I knew I had no right to end another human life."
Almost three years on, Maria has a beautiful two-year-old boy who is the light of her life. Now in her third year of medicine, she's also a first-class honours student.
Her personal experience has deeply informed her professional ethic as a young medic planning to specialise in obstetrics. She has observed the recent abortion controversy here with deep concern, fearing that if Ireland legislates for abortion, it will end up going down the road of her own country, where up to 100,000 terminations take place every year.

NEW BLOG ON THE PRIESTHOOD


We all know the Priesthood is under vicious attack around the world.  We need to remember that the Priesthood is a holy Vocation. It is not just a job.  It is a life of joyful and challenging Service to the Lord and His People, to the whole Church.  It demands sacrifice and obedience to Christ and to the Holy Father and the Teachings of the Church.  

This blog called 'The Catholic Priesthood' (link below)  is dedicated to the Priesthood and to all those who have faithfully followed the Call of Christ since He first called His Apostles.  Let us pray for all Priests...

Link to Blog:  The Catholic Priesthood

Welcome Service Trinity College Dublin, Ireland 4th Oct 2012 –The University of Dublin Address given by Archbishop Charles J Brown, Apostolic Nuncio

It is a great honour for me to be with you this evening in the Chapel of Trinity College as you begin another academic year. I thank the Provost of the University, Dr Patrick Prendergast, for his presence among us. In a special way, I want to thank the Revd Darren McCallig for his kind words of welcome. Let me begin by mentioning that I read in this morning’s Irish Times that Trinity has risen some seven places in the Times Higher Education rankings. So for that, I say “congratulations”.
 My own experience of having been a student in universities in four different countries makes me quite envious of you. I always found the beginning of the autumn term an exhilarating experience, an exhilaration born of the excitement of new courses, new professors, new things to learn, new questions to master.
The period of our lives in which we are university students is without any doubt one of the most formative in terms of setting the trajectory of our lives. It is often when we are in university that we come to the realization of our path in life, that we make decisions which affect our entire future.
And so, university life is certainly more than our studies, although our studies are important. It should be a time when, regardless of what we are studying, we begin to acquire something more than knowledge or skills. It should be a time in which we begin to acquire that difficult–to–define quality, which in English we call wisdom. Wisdom is usually described as “the quality of having experience, knowledge and good judgment”.
In Greek, the quality is of course called sof?a, and in Latin sapientia. Human beings have a thirst for wisdom, for sapientia. It’s no accident that our species is named for wisdom: homo sapiens. But the big question for us always is where is this wisdom to be found. Yes, we know that wisdom is connected to experience, but not all experiences make us wise. We know that wisdom is related to knowledge, but not all knowing leads to true wisdom.
For Cicero, sapientia was the ars vivendi (De finibus 1.42), the art of living, and that is surely as good definition as any. We want to live and we want to live well. Wisdom is the quality which makes us capable of doing so.
But we return to the big question: where is wisdom to be found? There is a strong tradition in the West that would say that true wisdom is found in relativism, or in other words that it is unwise to aspire to a truth which transcends one’s own person, a truth which is as valid for you as it is for me. In such a view, wisdom is to be found instead in the absolute conviction that all truth is relative. There are other traditions which would even despair of asking the question about wisdom and instead simply “praise the audacity of those who believe that human existence is devoid of any inherent meaning…” (Second Vatican Council, Gaudium et spes, 10). These currents are powerful in our own day, both on an academic level, and more significantly and perhaps more unusually, on a popular level as well.    
For Christians however the situation is different. There is first of all the awareness that the values of the world do not constitute in themselves a wisdom sufficient for living our lives. For a Christian, the ars vivendi cannot be completely identified with the way in which “the world” lives. And indeed this is what is communicated by Saint Paul in the reading which we have just heard this evening. He refers to the two streams of human thought with which he was familiar, and seeks to sum up their approaches: “Jews look for signs and Greeks look for wisdom” and then he proposes another way, “but we preach Christ crucified, a stumbling block for Jews and foolishness for gentiles” (1 Cor 1:22–23). He goes on to say that for those who have been called – both Jews and gentiles – “Christ is the power of God and the wisdom of God”. So, Paul first describes the two paths with which he was familiar. One he identifies with the Jews: the power of God as manifested in his signs. And the other with the Hellenistic world: wisdom or sof?a. And Paul argues that in the person of Jesus Christ crucified these two streams – power and wisdom – are at once brought together, reconciled, but also transcended in a power that looks like weakness, in a wisdom that looks like foolishness to the world.
And that is the paradox of Christianity: God chose the foolish things of the world to shame the wise and the weak things of the world to shame the strong, creating a new ars vivendi, which is in the world and yet not of the world. It is Jesus Christ who is this ars vivendi; it is he who is this way, this truth, this life (cf., John 14:6).
It is interesting to reflect on the fact that the great universities of the world like Trinity, are the successors, if you will, of the monastic schools of education which flourished in Europe in the first millennium. Those monastery schools sough quite consciously to impart a wisdom which was not of this world. In fact, the monasteries of Europe were shaped by the experience of Saint Benedict, the founder of Benedictine monasticism, who in the Catholic liturgy is memorably described as a person who “withdrew from the world…, knowingly unacquainted with its ways and wisely unlearned (sapienter indoctus) in its wisdom”.
It is quite amazing to think that it was this impulse to withdraw from the world and to become “wisely unlearned in its ways” that developed and changed, through many vicissitudes, into what we now know as the modern university, which is explicitly involved in engagement with the world. But perhaps this glance at the historical DNA of the modern university gives us a hint of how Christians might live and flourish in the university of today. We, in a certain sense, need to be “knowingly unacquainted” or “wisely unlearned” with regard to streams of thought which would despair of finding any meaning in human existence, or which would reduce the mystery of the human person to merely the material aspect, or which would encourage us to seek only our own interests at the expense of those of our brothers and sisters. We can be “knowingly unacquainted” in the sense that we know and understand such ideas, but that we choose to embrace a different wisdom, or better, we recognize that we have been embraced by a different Wisdom.
For Christians of a sacramental tradition, especially, of course, the Orthodox, Saint Paul’s words about Christ crucified as the power of God and the wisdom of God point us towards the two pillars of Christian life; the power of God which flows into us through the mystery of the sacraments, the signs of God, and secondly, the sof?a Qeo?, the wisdom of God, revealed in the Scriptures and Christian doctrine, pre–eminently in the Beatitudes. For us then as students and chaplains in a modern university, the path of the Christian, at least so it seems to me, is to drink from these  two sources of power and wisdom, that is, from the sacraments and Christian teaching. And if we do so, we will in our own twenty–first century way live wisely, like Saint Benedict, but in a different way, in the world, but not of the world.
Alasdair MacIntyre, the Scottish philosopher who is now professor emeritus at the University of Notre Dame, famously concluded his book After Virtue with a reference to Saint Benedict. Speaking of the modern world and academia, and referring to the picture of modernity communicated in a play by a famous graduate and later lecturer of Trinity College, Dublin, MacIntyre wrote in the final line of his book: “We are waiting not for a Godot, but for another – doubtless very different – St. Benedict” (p. 263). For MacIntyre, that meant someone who would do in our own time what Benedict did in his, create “a quite new kind of institution, that of the monastery of prayer, learning, and labor, in which and around which communities could not only survive, but flourish in a period of social and cultural darkness” (Prologue, p. xvi).
I myself am not so sure that what we need are new intuitions, but rather – for Christians in the post–modern world – a new vision based on the Benedictine tradition of prayer and study, on sacramental mysteries and Christian doctrine, on “the power of God and the wisdom of God” (1 Cor 1:24). The two go together. We cannot simply know Christianity, we have to live Christianity. Another Benedict, the Bishop of Rome, whose representative in Ireland I am, spoke about the need for wisdom in a meeting held just a month ago in Rome with many of his former students from his time as a university professor of theology. He said, “Wisdom is the art of being human, the art of being able to live well and of being able to die well. And one can live and die well only when the truth has been received and shows us the way: to be grateful for the gift that we did not invent, but that we were given, and to live in wisdom; to learn, thanks to the gift of God, how to be human in the right way” (Pope Benedict XVI, Homily, 2 September 2012).
My friends, as we begin this academic year, let us seek to live in that power and wisdom which are the gift of God in Jesus Christ. Let us entrust ourselves as well to the mother of Wisdom, the Sedes Sapientiae, Mary of Nazareth, to be our advocate and guide as we live our Christian faith.

Servant of God, Dorothy Day on the Love of God and Love of Neighbour


“...It was human love that helped me to understand divine love. Human love at its best, unselfish, glowing, illuminating our days, gives us a glimpse of the love of God for man. Love is the best thing we can know in this life, but it must be sustained by an effort of the will. It must lie still and quiet, dull and smoldering, for periods. 

It grows through suffering and patience and compassion. We must suffer for those we love, we must endure their trials and their suffering, we must even take upon ourselves the penalties due their sins. Thus we learn to understand the love of God for His creatures. Thus we understand the Crucifixion.”

Novena for the Protection of Life - Nov 30th - Dec 8th

PRAYER 
PRAISE 
AND  PENANCE


IN  THANKSGIVING FOR 
THE  GIFT OF LIFE

AND FOR THE PROTECTION OF 

LIFE  FROM  CONCEPTION 
TO  NATURAL  DEATH


FROM  30th  NOVEMBER  
TO  DECEMBER 8TH.....

OR START TODAY....



PRAYER TO THE
IMMACULATE CONCEPTION


O God,  who by the Immaculate Conception
of the Blessed Virgin Mary,
did prepare a worthy dwelling place for Your Son,
we beseech You that, as by the foreseen death of this, Your Son, You did preserve Her from all stain,
so too You would permit us, purified through Her intercession,  to come unto You.
Through the same Lord Jesus Christ,  Your Son, who lives and reigns with You in the unity of the Holy Spirit,
God, world without end.
Amen. 



For Each Day perhaps you can also try to do the following:

Prayer:  Daily Mass, Divine Office (Prayers of the Church - Morning and Evening prayer) each day, Holy Rosary and Chaplet of Divine Mercy, 3 o'clock Prayer, Examination of Conscience each evening, Night Prayer, a Holy Hour of Adoration whenever you can.  There is also Online Adoration (Savior.Org) for those who cannot get to a Church.  On Friday - Stations of the Cross, Contemplate the Passion of Christ.
             
Penance:  Confession during the week, one day of Fasting during the week where possible and where your health allows, other forms of penance such as giving up sweet things, giving up TV, giving up Facebook or whatever.

Praise:  To give thanks to God for everything in your daily life, the good and the bad things, during these nine days especially. This is also a sacrifice especially when your feelings are going against you...ultimately to thank God for the Gift of Life.  The Holy Mass is the ultimate Sacrifice of Praise and Thanksgiving to God.  


From the Diary of St. Faustina (On Giving Thanks to God in everything)

I want to live in the spirit of faith. I accept everything that comes my way as given me by the loving will of God, who sincerely desires my happiness. And so I will accept with submission and gratitude everything that God sends me. I will pay no attention to the voice of nature and to the promptings of self-love. Before each important action, I will stop to consider for a moment what relationship it has to eternal life and what may be the reason for undertaking it: Is it for the glory of God or for the good of my own soul or for the good of the souls of others? If my heart says yes, then I will not swerve from carrying out the given action, unmindful of either obstacles or sacrifices. I will not be frightened into abandoning my intention. It is enough for me to know that it is pleasing to God (1549, and 1262).

Please Pray For Ireland to Uphold the Sanctity of Life



“Give us the grace... When the sacredness of life before birth is attacked, to stand up and proclaim that no one ever has the authority to destroy unborn life.” 
Blessed John Paul II 



Please pray for Ireland at this time as it faces a battle against those who wish to bring in abortion.  The lies and falsehoods that are currently being spread so much all around the world are beyond belief.  The media seems unwilling to recognise the truth and does not wish to consider all those women who lost their lives through abortion, all those who are now suffering greatly because of abortion and all those little children who have died because of abortion and infanticide.  

Please support in any way you can with any donation of any amount no matter how small those who are fighting for the cause of Life in Ireland and Please pray for all of us that we may uphold the Sanctity of Life in our country.  But above all support us with Prayer and Penance.  

The replica of the Icon of Our Lady of Czestochowa is still in Ireland at this time. Family and Life organised this part  (around Ireland) of the worldwide pilgrimage of this beautiful image.  It is no coincidence that she came to us at this time.  Please check out more on their site:  Ocean to Ocean Pilgrimage

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