Hey! It's Julia! In school, we are learning about people who promoted peace. It's pretty obvious that we started out with Mother Teresa because she won the Nobel Peace Prize in 1979.
Agnes Gonxha Bojaxhiu was born on August 26, 1910. She was the youngest child in her family. When she was eight years old, her father died. When she was eighteen, she went off to Ireland to join the Sisters of Loreto. She had a great devotion to Saint Therese of Lisieux, so she became Sister Mary Teresa. After making her first vows, she was sent to Calcutta, India, to teach at Saint Mary's Girls School. On September 10, 1946, Mother Teresa boarded a train to attend a retreat. It was on the train that she received her "call within a call". That call was what drove Mother Teresa to her mission: serving the poorest of the poor in Calcutta. But she was not there yet.
Almost two full years passed, and Mother Teresa waited and waited for permission to leave the convent. There had never been religious sisters on the street before. It was a hard decision for Mother Teresa's superiors, but she was allowed to go serve the poor. On August 17, 1948, sporting a white sari with blue stripes, she entered the chaotic streets of Calcutta, India. At first, she worked with some medic sisters, but felt her call stronger in the slums. So, in December, Mother Teresa began what she is known for. She began each day with communion, and then set out for the slums, bearing a rosary like a sword. Soon, her old students from Saint Mary's began to come help her serve the poor.
In October, 1950, the Missionaries of Charity began. There was now a new order that did what Mother Teresa was doing. They were caring for the dying on the street, giving medicine to those who could be saved, and praying with her patients.
Soon, the world began to notice the little nun running around India, helping the sick the best they could. She received two awards: The Nobel Peace Prize in 1979 and the Indian Padmashri Award in 1962. By 1997, 4,000 members of the Missionaries of Charity worked in 610 places in 123 countries!
On September 5, 1997, Mother Teresa went to see God. She was beatified by Pope John Paul II, who she had met, and was canonized by Pope Francis in 2016.
Mother Teresa, PRAY FOR US!
Sunday, March 17, 2019
SAINTS CORNER - The Servant to the Sick: The Story of Mother Teresa
Sunday, March 10, 2019
SAINTS CORNER - The Bishop with a Breastplate: The Story of Saint Patrick
Hello! It's Julia again! We are decorating our school for our Saint Patrick's Day party! We have made shamrocks with gold glitter and have put Irish flags all over our school! Sometimes, with all this fun, it's hard to remember the story of Saint Patrick and why we celebrate it in the first place!
Saint Patrick is one of the most popular saints. His feast day is celebrated all over the world! But, did you know that Saint Patrick actually wasn't from Ireland? He wasn't! He was captured by slave traders and he had to leave his home in the country of Wales. He lived in Ireland until he was twenty, herding sheep. He left when God told him that a ship was waiting to take him back to Wales.
One night, Patrick had a dream. In the dream, he was begged to return to Ireland. Patrick was inspired to become a priest. When he was ordained a bishop, he returned to Ireland. At first, many of the Irish were skeptical about his religion. They clung to their old pagan beliefs. Saint Patrick was able to convert them, and he built many churches in Ireland. He preached in Ireland for forty years!
Saint Patrick used shamrocks to explain the Trinity to the Irish. He showed them how the shamrock has three leaves, one for each member of the Trinity. If you look close enough, you can see that each leaf on the shamrock is shaped like a heart!
Saint Patrick taught us a special prayer. It is called Saint Patrick's Breastplate.
Saint Patrick is one of the most popular saints. His feast day is celebrated all over the world! But, did you know that Saint Patrick actually wasn't from Ireland? He wasn't! He was captured by slave traders and he had to leave his home in the country of Wales. He lived in Ireland until he was twenty, herding sheep. He left when God told him that a ship was waiting to take him back to Wales.
One night, Patrick had a dream. In the dream, he was begged to return to Ireland. Patrick was inspired to become a priest. When he was ordained a bishop, he returned to Ireland. At first, many of the Irish were skeptical about his religion. They clung to their old pagan beliefs. Saint Patrick was able to convert them, and he built many churches in Ireland. He preached in Ireland for forty years!
Saint Patrick used shamrocks to explain the Trinity to the Irish. He showed them how the shamrock has three leaves, one for each member of the Trinity. If you look close enough, you can see that each leaf on the shamrock is shaped like a heart!
Saint Patrick taught us a special prayer. It is called Saint Patrick's Breastplate.
Saint Patrick's Breastplate
Christ with me,
Christ before me,
Christ behind me,
Christ in me,
Christ beneath me,
Christ above me,
Christ on my right,
Christ on my left,
Christ when I lie down,
Christ when I sit down,
Christ when I arise,
Christ in the heart of every man who thinks of me,
Christ in the mouth of everyone who speaks of me,
Christ in every eye that sees me,
Christ in every ear that hears me.
Saint Patrick, PRAY FOR US!
Sunday Check-In
On Sundays, you can try to check-in with yourself about your Lenten sacrifice(s). Here are a few questions you can ask yourself:
- How am I growing in my faith through my Lenten sacrifice(s)?
- Have I broken my Lenten sacrifice(s) yet?
- Am I feeling closer to Jesus through my sacrifice(s)?
Ask yourself these questions every Sunday. These will help you keep track of how you are doing with your sacrifice(s).
God Bless!
Lenten Sacrifice Ideas
Sometimes, it's hard to pick something to sacrifice, so I have included in this post a list of things to get rid of and add on during Lent!
Get Rid Of...
Get Rid Of...
- Candy
- Limit screen time
- Donate some toys to a local charity
- Donate some clothes to a local charity
- Long showers
- TV shows with bad content
- Using bad words
- Being sassy towards your parents/teachers
- Social media
- Gossip
- Makeup
- Sarcasm
- Being irreverent during Mass
- Checking your phone too often
- Being mean to your siblings
- Waiting until you are done doing what you were doing before doing the chores you were told to do
- Give some of your money to church or to a charity
Add...
- An extra prayer to your morning routine
- Read the readings before going to Mass
- Meditate on the Stations of the Cross
- Make time for Confession (you might have to give up some rest time!)
- Put a CRS rice bowl in your home
- Make a list of forty people to pray for
- Do a chore for one of the members in your family
- Do a secret act of kindness for someone
- Ask your teacher if you can help them with anything
- A book of spiritual readings to read every day (try some saint diaries, for example:
- Divine Mercy in My Soul By Saint Faustina Kowalska
- Story of a Soul By Saint Therese of Lisieux
- A book of the lives of the saints
- A book of daily meditations
The Violet Vestments: Why Does the Priest Wear Violet During Lent?
During the Liturgical seasons of Advent and Lent, the priest wears violet. The priest wears violet because it is the color of penance, sorrow, suffering, and humility. Because Lent is a time of penance, it is right for him to wear this color during this Liturgical Season. Historically, violet was also the color of royalty because violet was an expensive color. So, along with being a color of penance and suffering, it also shows how Jesus is the King of Heaven.
Thursday, March 7, 2019
SAINTS CORNER - The Saint Named Soubirous: The Story of Saint Bernadette
Whenever someone sees the Blessed Virgin Mary or Jesus comes to them, they're not usually someone special. Mary picked three shepherd children at Fatima, and Jesus picked a young nun named Sister Faustina in Poland. They don't go to the rich, famous, and powerful. They go to the small, humble, and meek. That might be one of the reasons that whenever someone sees an apparition, it isn't believed to be true at first. Why on earth would the Queen of Heaven come to poor children? Well, the Queen of Heaven did just that when she traveled to the small town of Lourdes, France, to speak to a young fourteen year old girl named Bernadette.
Bernadette was the oldest of six children. She had a disease called asthma that affected her breathing. Because of this, she couldn't go to school, and she couldn't read or write.
When she was fourteen, she went with her sister and her sister's friend to gather firewood. They came to a place called Massabielle, where there was a small grotto. Her sister and friend waded through the creek to get firewood from the grotto, but the water was too cold and would hurt Bernadette, so she was told to stay on the other side of the creek. While she was waiting, she felt strong, cold, winds. She looked towards the grotto and saw a figure there. The woman was beautiful! She had a white robe, a blue sash, a veil, a rosary in her hands, and a yellow rose on each foot.
Bernadette didn't know who the woman was, and she was very afraid. She found that she could not make the Sign of the Cross until the woman made the Sign of the Cross. She took out her rosary and prayed. The woman disappeared after Bernadette finished praying the rosary. When Bernadette stood up, she decided to wade through the creek to get to her companions. When she did, the cold creek turned warm and it was easier for her to walk through.
Bernadette told her companions what had happened, but even though Bernadette made her friend and sister promise not to tell her mother, they told anyway. They believed Bernadette was not really seeing anything; they believed it was just her imagination. Many people told Bernadette to stop going, but she went anyway. More and more people joined her at Massabielle every time she went. Only Bernadette could see the apparition.
Bernadette and a woman from the town went to the grotto together, with the permission of Bernadette's mother. They went with a pencil and a piece of paper so Bernadette could write down what she said. But the woman in the grotto told Bernadette that she didn't need to write anything, but to come every day for fifteen days. The woman told her that she promised to make her happy in heaven, but not on earth.
As Bernadette's story got out, more people came to the grotto. Doctors came to examine her. All the doctors said the same thing: there was nothing wrong with her. The government was getting mad at Bernadette, so they forbade her from ever returning to the grotto. Bernadette told them she could do no such thing. She just had to see the woman at the grotto every day! The government told her that if she didn't promise to never return to the grotto, she would be sent to jail.
Bernadette kept going to the grotto every day. One day, at the grotto, the woman told her to eat the plants in the grotto and drink from the spring. Massabielle had never had a spring, so Bernadette dug a hole in the ground and covered her face with dirt. After she had left, someone found that there was water coming out of the whole in the ground where Bernadette had dug! The water coming from the spring cured many people.
Bernadette also brought a candle with her to the grotto when she went. Once, while she was watching the woman, she placed her hand over the candle without knowing it. The flames burned right through her hand, but Bernadette wasn't burned or hurt in any way.
On the Feast of the Annunciation, the woman told Bernadette her name. "I am the Immaculate Conception." Bernadette didn't know what the Immaculate Conception was, so she asked a priest what it was. When he heard that the woman was called the "Immaculate Conception", he knew that the apparition was real because Bernadette didn't know what it meant.
After all Bernadette's visions were over, Bernadette joined a religious order - the Sisters of Charity. She lived as a Sister of Charity until her death at age 35. She was buried in the convent, but they took her out of the ground to put her body in a church, but they found that her body was just like it was when she had been buried 30 years earlier! Her feast day is April 6.
Saint Bernadette, PRAY FOR US!
March: The Month of Saint Joseph
Saint Joseph is one of the most well known saints. He was a protector. He listened to God.
Joseph is the only member of the Holy Family that sinned, but he was still a compassionate, loving husband and father to the members of the Holy Family. He listened to God when he was told to do something. If he hadn't listened, Mary and Jesus would've died.
An angel came to him twice to tell him what to do. He was first visited by the Angel Gabriel when he was told to marry Mary, even though she already had a child. This might've damaged Joseph's reputation, but he did it anyway because he knew it was the right thing to do. The second time he was visited by an angel was in Bethlehem. The angel told him to pack up Mary and Jesus and flee to Egypt because Herod was looking to kill Jesus. He was an obedient follower of God.
Saint Joseph is an example for all. He teaches us how to be obedient, and he shows us how to protect families and friends. He shows us how to act immediately when God tells us something. The life of Saint Joseph teaches us a great many things about listening and obedience.
Now, try to be obedient and try to listen! When your parents tell you to load the dishwasher or fold the laundry, be obedient and do it right away. When your friends are having conversations at lunch, listen closely. Say something about the story they had to tell. They will feel like they matter!
God Bless!
Joseph is the only member of the Holy Family that sinned, but he was still a compassionate, loving husband and father to the members of the Holy Family. He listened to God when he was told to do something. If he hadn't listened, Mary and Jesus would've died.
An angel came to him twice to tell him what to do. He was first visited by the Angel Gabriel when he was told to marry Mary, even though she already had a child. This might've damaged Joseph's reputation, but he did it anyway because he knew it was the right thing to do. The second time he was visited by an angel was in Bethlehem. The angel told him to pack up Mary and Jesus and flee to Egypt because Herod was looking to kill Jesus. He was an obedient follower of God.
Saint Joseph is an example for all. He teaches us how to be obedient, and he shows us how to protect families and friends. He shows us how to act immediately when God tells us something. The life of Saint Joseph teaches us a great many things about listening and obedience.
Now, try to be obedient and try to listen! When your parents tell you to load the dishwasher or fold the laundry, be obedient and do it right away. When your friends are having conversations at lunch, listen closely. Say something about the story they had to tell. They will feel like they matter!
God Bless!
Lent
Lent is the period of forty days before Easter. You might be wondering why the church uses the number forty so much. Well, in the Bible, the number forty is used a lot. Noah spent forty days and nights on the ark in the Book of Genesis. The Israelites wandered for forty years in the desert before coming across the Promised Land. Jesus fasted in the desert for forty days when he was tempted by the devil.
During Lent, we focus on three important practices:
- Fasting
- Abstain from meat on Fridays in Lent
- Take part in a fast on Ash Wednesday and Good Friday
- For the fast, you can have one meal and two small meals that don't add up to a full meal
- Many people give up something for Lent
- Prayer
- Lent is a good time for prayer
- We can pray to change our hearts
- Almsgiving
- Donate some of your toys to a local charity
- Give a few dollars of your allowance to church on Sundays
Lent is a quiet time where you strengthen the three practices above and meditate on the suffering, death, and resurrection of Jesus. That doesn't mean you can't have fun, through! There are many fun practices you can take part in! For example, you can...
- Make a crown of thorns (this is very easy and can be reused from year to year!)
- Get a plain brown wreath
- Get toothpicks (optional: dye them brown)
- Stick the toothpicks in the wreath
- Every time you make a sacrifice, take a thorn out of the wreath
- By Easter, try to have all the toothpicks be gone!
- Bury your Alleluia
- During Lent, we don't say "Alleluia"
- You can bury your Alleluia!
- Find a box
- Write "Alleluia" on a piece of paper or find an "Alleluia" coloring sheet on the internet
- Color the Alleluia
- Put it in the box
- Leave the box somewhere
- DO NOT OPEN IT UNTIL EASTER SUNDAY
Ash Wednesday
Ash Wednesday is a very important day in the Catholic Church: it marks the beginning of the Lenten season! Lent has forty days, so Ash Wednesday begins those forty days. Ashes symbolize penance, as well as mourning. In Biblical times, people would wear sackcloth and sit in ashes to show that they had done wrong. We receive ashes on our foreheads to symbolize repentance.
When you go up to receive ashes on your forehead, the priest might say a number of things, including:
Fun Fact! Did you know that the ashes are from burnt palms from last Palm Sunday?
When you go up to receive ashes on your forehead, the priest might say a number of things, including:
- You are dust and to dust you shall return.
- Turn away from sin and be faithful to the Gospel
You are encouraged by the church to go to Mass on Ash Wednesday, but it is not a Holy Day of Obligation.
I encourage you to keep your ashes on all day! The ashes are meant to show we are sinners, so wearing them in public is okay! We're all sinners, and so you shouldn't feel uncomfortable with your ashes on at the grocery store, in the park, or anywhere else! Remember: The ashes are not making you a better person, neither are they a sign that you are holy. They point you out as a sinner, which we all are.
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