FULLY CATHOLIC

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Catechism Corner

How Will We Learn About God?

God reveals Himself to us in many ways namely;

  • Through study of our Catholic Faith
  • Catechism lessons
  • Attending Mass and listening to sermons as often as you can, especially on Sundays
  • Reading the word of God – the Bible and listening to the preaching of the same word
  • Attending religious discussion groups, like the young Christian students.

Once we get to know God, He expects us to love Him.  In fact, once you get to know God, you cannot help but to love Him, as He will seduce you. Our love for God should not reside in emotions.  Instead our love for God should reside in our will. It is not how we feel towards God but in what we are willing to do for God that our love proves itself, (Matthew 12: 46-50).

Anyone who does the will of my Father in heaven is my brother and sister and mother.’ In other words, hearing the word of God and putting that same word into practice really shows our love for God.  LOVE is the key word; however, there is no love (true love) unless it manifests itself in ACTION; in doing of what the loved one wants.  So if we say we love God, then we must serve Him the way that He wants us to serve Him.  John 6:28-29; then they said to Him, ‘what must we do if we are to carry out God’s work? Jesus gave them this answer, ‘This is carrying out God’s work: you must believe in the one he has sent’. Here the ‘one who He has sent refers to God’s only son Jesus.

After we have known God, loved God and served God, and our life on earth is over, then will we find fulfilment in being with God forever in heaven.  Heaven is a big reward, supernatural reward, to be got by living a holy life (Ephesians 1:4).  To know, love and serve God with the help of His grace is supernatural life. It is the reason why God created us all.

Ref.  CCC 355 - 358

Taken From The Compendium  - Catechism Of The Catholic Church

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At the Last Supper with his apostles on the eve of his passion Jesus anticipated, that is, both symbolized his free self-offering and made it really present: “This is my Body which is given for you” (Luke 22:19), “This is my Blood which is poured out...” (Matthew 26:28) Thus he both instituted the Eucharist as the “memorial” (1 Corinthians 11:25) of his sacrifice and instituted his apostles as priests of the new covenant. Please click here to learn more about Holy Mass, also known as the celebration of the Holy Eucharist.

  

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Today's Saint

CNA - Saint of the Day

ACI Prensa's latest initiative is the Catholic News Agency (CNA), aimed at serving the English-speaking Catholic audience. ACI Prensa (www.aciprensa.com) is currently the largest provider of Catholic news in Spanish and Portuguese.

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  • St. Mary Magdalene de Pazzi
    On May 25, the Catholic Church celebrates Saint Mary Magdalene de Pazzi, an Italian noblewoman of the sixteenth and early seventeenth centuries who became a Carmelite nun distinguished for her intense prayer life and devotion to frequent Holy Communion. In 2007, Pope Benedict XVI marked the 400th anniversary of St. Mary Magdalene de Pazzi’s death in a letter to the Archbishop of Florence, her birthplace. He described her as “a symbolic figure of a living love that recalls the essential mystical dimension of every Christian life.� “May the great mystic,� the Pope wrote, “still make her voice heard in all the Church, spreading to every human creature the proclamation to love God.� Born on April 2, 1566, the future “Mary Magdalene� was given the name of Caterina at the time of her birth. She was the only daughter of her parents, who both came from prominent families. Caterina was drawn to the Holy Eucharist from a young age, and she resolved to serve God as a consecrated virgin shortly after receiving her First Communion at age 10. Late in the year 1582 she entered a strictly traditional Carmelite monastery, where Holy Communion was – unusually for the time period – administered daily. Receiving her religious habit the next year, she took the name of Mary Magdalene. From March to May of 1584, Mary became seriously ill and was thought to be in danger of death. On May 27 of that year she made her religious vows while lying sick upon a pallet. Her recovery marked the start of an extended mystical experience, which lasted 40 days and involved extraordinary experiences taken down by her religious sisters in a set of manuscripts. Mary served the monastery in a series of teaching and supervisory positions, while also contributing to her community through manual work. Her fellow Carmelites respected her strict sense of discipline, which was accompanied by profound charity and practical wisdom. Her experiences of suffering and temptation helped her to guide and inspire others. Extraordinary spiritual occurrences were a frequent feature of this Carmelite nun’s life, to a much greater degree than is typical in the tradition of Catholic mysticism. Many of her experiences of God were documented by others in her community, although Mary herself disliked the attention and would seemingly have preferred for these events to remain private. She did wish, however, to call attention to God’s love, which she saw as tragically underappreciated and unreciprocated by mankind. Mary Magdalene de Pazzi is remembered for making dramatic gestures – running through the halls of her monastery, or ringing its bells at night – while proclaiming the urgent need for all people to awaken to God’s love, and respond in kind. Her earthly life came to an end on May 25, 1607, after an excruciating illness lasting nearly three years. Pope Clement IX canonized St. Mary Magdalene de Pazzi in 1669.

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