Wednesday, December 31, 2014

Fwd: TAYLOR MARSHALL: 10 heresies about the birth of Christ



---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Blogtrottr <busybee@blogtrottr.com>
Date: Wednesday, December 31, 2014
Subject: TAYLOR MARSHALL: 10 Heresies about the Birth of Christ
To: kcknight@gmail.com


AUTHOR=UnknownMARSHALL:

Here are 10 heresies related to the birth of Christ at Christmas. Just like counterfeit money, it's best to know the real thing so that you can spot the fake bills. It's the same way with your faith in Christ.

Christ in Christmas born on Dec 25

So here are 10 theological counterfeits. Print them out and memorize them:

  1. Universalism teaches that Christ was born in Bethlehem to save all humans and all demons. Origen allegedly taught this doctrine. But the Nicene Creed reads "for us men and for our salvation, he came down from heaven. Christ was born to redeem only humans.
  2. Ebionism teaches that Joseph is the natural father of Jesus. The Nicene Creed refutes this with:"conceived of the Holy Spirit."
  3. Arianism teaches that Jesus not fully God, but only the first and best creature of God. On the contrary, the Catholic Church teaches that Christ if fully God and fully man.
  4. Docetism teaches that Jesus only appeared to have a real physical body. On the contrary, the Catholic Church teaches that Christ is fully God and fully man. As Christ says, "Hand and see, for a spirit has not flesh and bones."
  5. Valentinianism taught that Holy Spirit deposited the Christ Child in her womb and that Mary was the a surrogate mother, but not truly Christ's genetic mother. The Apostle Paul refutes this when he writes, "God sent His Son, made of a woman."
  6. Apollinarianism wrongly teaches that Christ did not have a human soul. They taught that the divine nature replaced the soul of Christ. This is false because Christ in the Gospels says, "Now my soul is troubled."
  7. Nestorianism teaches that Jesus is two "persons" – Jesus the human son of Mary and Jesus the divine Son of God. On the contrary, the Catholic Church teaches that Christ is one person with two natures: divine nature and human nature.
  8. Monophysitism teaches that Jesus is fully God but not fully man. The Catholic Church teaches that Christ has two natures: divine nature and human nature.
  9. Monothelitism teaches that Jesus has only one will. The Catholic Church teaches that Christ has two wills: a divine will and a human will belonging to His human soul.
  10. Iconoclasm teaches that images are idolatrous. On the contrary, the Catholic Church defends the use of Christian (not pagan) images since Christ became visible through the incarnation.
    Pelagianism denies original sin and teaches that grace is not necessary for salvation. The Catholic Church teaches that we are born in original sin and saved by grace through faith and works.

Do you want to learn more about Catholic Theology and how to share and defend it? If so, please join the New Saint Thomas Institute. Enrollment for 2015 is open for a limited time: newsaintthomas.com.

NSTI Certificate

The post 10 Heresies about the Birth of Christ appeared first on Taylor Marshall.

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Fwd: RADIO VATICANA: Number of Catholics increases by 15 million per year, lags behind world population growth



---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Blogtrottr <busybee@blogtrottr.com>
Date: Wednesday, December 31, 2014
Subject: RADIO VATICANA: Number of Catholics growing throughout the world
To: kcknight@gmail.com


AUTHOR=webteam@vaticanradio.org:

The number of Catholics in the world has increased with growth registered across all five continents. The figures are taken by the Fides news agency from the latest edition of the Church's Book of Statistics updated to 31 December 2012. These show that on that date the number of Catholics in the world stood at 1,228,621,000 with an overall increase of more than 15,000,000 compared to the previous year. The Americas and Africa registered the biggest increases followed by Asia, Europe and Oceania. The world percentage of Catholics stood at 17.49 %, a decrease of 0.01% compared to the end of 2011.

The total number of priests in the world increased by 895 to 414,313.  Europe once again registered the largest decrease (-1,375) followed by the Americas (-90) and Oceania (-80). In Africa the number of priests grew by 1,076 and in Asia by 1,364.

There was an overall decrease in the number of women religious worldwide, whose numbers dropped by 10,677 to 702,529. Once again Africa and Asia showed increases whilst Europe and the Americas showed the biggest decrease in the number of women religious. 

The number of lay missionaries in the world is 362,488 with an overall decrease of 19,234.

In the field of education, the Catholic Church runs 71,188 kindergartens, 95,246 primary schools and 43,783 secondary schools. Charity and healthcare centres in the world run by the Church are 115,352.  

#kk2churchnews

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Fwd: GET RELIGION: Ignatius, what went wrong? The Atlantic looks at 'rebranding' of Jesuit colleges



---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Blogtrottr <busybee@blogtrottr.com>
Date: Wednesday, December 31, 2014
Subject: GET RELIGION: Ignatius, what happened? The Atlantic looks at 'rebranding' of Jesuit colleges
To: kcknight@gmail.com


AUTHOR=Dawn EdenEDEN:  Washington, D.C., USA - April 9, 2012. Healy Hall with the statue of Georgetown University founder John Carroll in front and some people walking in background. Georgetown University is a top-ranking private university in the United States. It is located in the historic district of Georgetown in Northwest Washington, D.C.

A new article in The Atlantic looks at how many Jesuit colleges are rebranding themselves to project an image of fidelity to so-called "Catholic values" without proclaiming fidelity to actual Catholic teachings.

There is a lot to chew on in Autumn Jones' "The New Brand of Catholic Universities," and more than a few religion ghosts -- that is, hints of valuable religion angles that are left unexplored. Key words? Ex Corde Ecclesiae.

Two points especially call out for clarification. The first is that of what happened to the Jesuits. Jones writes:

A fourth of the 28 Jesuit colleges and universities currently have lay presidents, and the number of Jesuit priests who are active in everyday operations at the schools isn't nearly as high as it once was.

That is putting it mildly. Here's how the Washington Post reported the decline in local Jesuit vocations in 2011, which reflects a global trend:

When John Langan came to Georgetown University in 1975 as a young Jesuit priest, he was one of 112 brothers from the Catholic order on campus. ...
Today there are barely half as many Jesuits at Georgetown, the order's flagship university. Gonzaga, a Jesuit high school in Northwest Washington, is down to 17, compared with 43 in 1970.

It would have been enlightening for the Atlantic to at least ask why there are fewer Jesuits at Jesuit colleges. The reasons (such as those brought out by First Things then-editor David Mills in his response to the 2011 WaPo piece) could shed light upon the forces contributing to the diminishment of the schools' Catholic identity.

The other omission in the Atlantic piece concerns an issue raised by one of Jones' sources:

Sean Daru, a 2014 Regis [University] graduate from Denver, sought a Catholic education and needed to stay close to home for family reasons. Regis was his only option. "It is different in very meaningful and obvious ways," Daru said. "Some of those differences are good and necessary. And some of those differences aren't. While, undoubtedly, there are things that make Regis Catholic, there are things that are missing that are central to what it would be to be a Catholic university."

That last line is a great quote; I would call it the heart of the article.

After reading it, one would expect a follow-up question: What things are missing from Regis that are central to the student's idea of a Catholic university? Eucharistic adoration? Required classes in Catholic theology? A social-justice club that is active in the pro-life arena? The reader is left guessing.

One last note: The Atlantic quotes Gonzaga University President Thayne McCulloh extensively throughout its article, even giving him the last word.

However, although the article mentions organizations that are working to promote Catholic identity at Jesuit colleges, it fails to quote any representative of such a group, or any outside critic. Instead, it permits McCulloh to respond extensively to a generalized account of such groups:

Today, a handful of organizations, concerned about these changes, advocate for a stronger Catholic identity at Jesuit universities. The 1887 Trust and the Father King Society are two examples. Participants share concerns regarding events, speakers, curriculum requirements, and faculty appointments.
But McCulloh hasn't been fazed by these efforts: "I respect the right of people to form groups, to create circles, to engage in discussion about issues that are important to them and those they feel ought to be relevant to us. I have actively engaged with them and I have let them know that I do not agree with their perspective."
"If they experienced it with us, no, they would not find perfection," McCulloh continued. "But they would find that all of the things that the Church and the Jesuits are asking universities to do are here and obvious."

Once again, the last line invites a follow-up: What things are church authorities and the Jesuits asking universities to do?

Without any information from an actual representative of the groups that are calling Jesuit universities to greater religious accountability, McCulloh is responding to a straw man. In other words, where is the other side of this debate?

#kk3always

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Fwd: DIGG: Bring in 2015 by watching Lovejoy, the first naked-eye comet of the year



---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Blogtrottr <busybee@blogtrottr.com>
Date: Wednesday, December 31, 2014
Subject: DIGG: Bring In The New Year By Waching The First Naked-Eye Comet
To: kcknight@gmail.com


AUTHOR=Unknown: 2014 hasn't even ended yet and we already have one of the best comets of 2015 showing off in our skies: C/2014 Q2 (Lovejoy), already visible to the naked eye and predicted to get brighter over the next couple of weeks! #kk2curators

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Fwd: SACRED PAGE: Top 5 academic reads of 2014



---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Blogtrottr <busybee@blogtrottr.com>
Date: Wednesday, December 31, 2014
Subject: SACRED PAGE: Top Academic Reads of 2014
To: kcknight@gmail.com


AUTHOR=Michael BarberBARBER: As we wrap up 2014, I wanted to pull together a list of some of my favorite reads of the year. This is always painful--there were so many great books I read this year. But in order to keep this post short and meaningful (a list of 10 is just going to be too long), I'm going to list 5 of the most important books I read this year. Two caveats:  First, notice I said these are the five of the most #kk2mugshot

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Fwd: KATHY SCHIFFER: Hobby Lobby’s 2014 Christmas message



---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Blogtrottr <busybee@blogtrottr.com>
Date: Wednesday, December 31, 2014
Subject: KATHY SCHIFFER: Hobby Lobby's 2014 Christmas Message
To: kcknight@gmail.com


AUTHOR=Kathy SchifferSCHIFFER: Hobby Lobby, the craft store which challenged the Affordable Care Act's requirement and refused to pay for abortifacient drugs as part of its employee health package, has once again celebrated the Christmas holiday by placing a full-page advertisement in newspapers around the country. Their latest message was designed in-house by an employee in Hobby Lobby's [Read More...] #kk2mugshot

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Fwd: CATHOLIC EXCHANGE: The Great Bridge Feast of St. Sylvester



---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Blogtrottr <busybee@blogtrottr.com>
Date: Tuesday, December 30, 2014
Subject: CATHOLIC EXCHANGE: The Great Bridge Feast of St. Sylvester
To: kcknight@gmail.com


AUTHOR=Richard BeckerBECKER: Sylvester_I_and_ConstantineLate in time behold him come, Offspring of the Virgin's womb. Veiled in flesh the Godhead see; Hail the incarnate Deity! ~ Charles Wesley It's New Year's Eve – break out the Champagne! Get the hors d'oeuvres ready, and the party hats! Oh, and don't forget to mark the feast of Pope St. Sylvester in No, but don't worry if you're in the dark – you're not the only one. {The feast of St. Sylvester is somewhat awkward and obscure, and it's often overlooked – in fact, as an optional memorial, it's frequently skipped altogether. Nevertheless, it's a celebration I look forward to every year, for it neatly rounds out the Christmas Octave as a nuanced link between the Incarnation and the Church.

But first there's the awkwardness – the timing for instance. It's the last day of the calendar year, and everybody is either in the final throes of Christmas exuberance, or else (more likely) resting up for New Year's Eve revelries to come later this evening.} Plus, it's always a truncated feast since it precedes the Solemnity of Mary on January 1. Liturgically speaking, Sylvester's day is always trumped in the late afternoon by Vigils in honor of Our Lady – not that the saint would object, mind you.

#kk3always

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Fwd: CRUX: Italian writer Vittorio Messori stirs a hornet’s nest with doubts about Pope Francis



---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Blogtrottr <busybee@blogtrottr.com>
Date: Wednesday, December 31, 2014
Subject: CRUX: Italian writer stirs a hornet's nest with doubts about Pope Francis
To: kcknight@gmail.com


AUTHOR=John L. Allen Jr.ALLEN: {For those in and around the Vatican, the most talked-about piece of rhetoric during the holiday season has been Pope Francis' Dec. 22 blast at the Roman Curia. A close second, however, has been Vittorio Messori's own Dec. 24 fusillade at the pope, published in the Italian paper of record, Corriere della Sera.

Under the headline, "Doubts about the turning point of Pope Francis," Messori wrote that "my evaluation of this papacy oscillates continually between adhesion and perplexity," and also asserted that Francis' unpredictability has caused even "some of the cardinals who were among his electors to have second thoughts."} Whether the apparent contradictions that surround Pope Francis are a deficit or a strength is, perhaps, in the eye of the beholder, but they are undeniably part of the package. #kk3always

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Tuesday, December 30, 2014

We must pray to avoid the chastisements of God if we do not soon repent



---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Blogtrottr <busybee@blogtrottr.com>
Date: Tuesday, December 30, 2014
Subject: ARCHDIOCESE OF WASHINGTON: "Alas, Alas for the Great City!" An Urgent Plea for Prayer at the New Year!
To: kcknight@gmail.com


AUTHOR=Msgr. Charles PopePOPE: {We are very close to the New Year 2015. And most of us at the New Year have it in mind to pray for our future year and for that of our family, country and culture. With that in mind there is something of an admonition that I would share with us all from the Scriptures. For while we look to the new year with hope, we do well to soberly assess the warnings of God that are seeming more applicable than ever. Above all we must pray so as to avoid the otherwise necessary chastisements of God and the inevitability of ruin at our own hand if we do not soon repent.}

We have good reason to have concern for what we have come to call Western Culture.  Out last century was nothing less than a blood bath of world wars, cold wars, killing fields, mass starvations, abortion and euthanasia. It is conservatively estimated that 100 million were put to death for ideological purposes (e.g. Hitlers camps, Stalin' mass starvations, Pol Pot's killing fields, Mao's camps, Rwanda, the Balkan genocides etc). Add to this the number of abortions worldwide, and the war dead, and the number easily reaches 200 million. We are very close to the New Year 2015 A.D. And most of us at the New Year have it in mind to pray for our future year and for that of our family, country and culture. With that in mind there is something of an admonition that I would share with us all from […] #kk3always

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10 facts about angels that will blow your mind

10 Facts about Angels That Will Blow Your Mind - EpicPew: The Church has very few official teachings on angels (CCC 328-336, 391-395). However, theologians have come to a consensus on certain topics relating to the angels. Most of these teachings come from St. Thomas Aquinas, as well as St. Bonaventure, and Dionysius.

Below are some of the most mind-blowing things we know about angels.

Biblical archaeology's top ten discoveries of 2014

Biblical Archaeology’s Top Ten Discoveries of 2014 | Christianity Today: A flurry of year-end announcements provided some late-breaking additions to the list of archaeological discoveries made public in 2014. Below are the top ten findings of the broad variety of institutional and salvage excavations taking place in the lands of the Bible.

The Gospel According to Steve Martin

The Gospel According to Steve Martin - The Imaginative ConservativeSHEA: Comedian Steve Martin used to do a routine in which he said, “Remember a couple of years back when the earth (wry pause) exploded? Remember how they built that giant space ark and loaded all of humanity into it, but the government decided not to tell the stupid people what was going on so that they wouldn’t panic?” The light of understanding would then break across his face as he surveyed the audience and he would quickly backtrack saying, “Oooooooh! Never mind!”

Mr. Crossan is saying the evangelists not only attempted, but succeeded, at something exactly like this. He says that the gospels are works of cunning fiction trying to link the Nazarene carpenter with King David by portraying him as born in “the city of David,” Bethlehem. And so they do what to get Jesus there in time for his birth and debut as the Son of David?

Pope Francis drew 6 million people to the Vatican in 2014

Pope Francis drew 6 million to the Vatican in 2014 | CruxALLEN: Pope Francis remains a powerful magnet for humanity, drawing almost 6 million people to events in Rome during the course of 2014, according to figures released Monday by the Vatican.

The numbers represent a small dip from 2013, when Vatican statistics showed that 6.6 million people attended events led by Pope Francis in Rome. Nonetheless, they still are substantially higher than the totals for Pope Benedict XVI, who in 2011 drew just 2.5 million.

Each year, the Prefecture for the Pontifical Household releases year-end totals for the number of people who attended general audiences, special audiences, liturgical events, and Sunday Angelus addresses with the pope.

Seems female empowerment really does define itself by masculine standards, after all...

Feminism Solves Its Mid-Life Crisis Like a Man!SCALIA: It is striking how many of the women being lionized here have either been born to extraordinary wealth or have been wealthy for many decades. Lena Dunham and Taylor Swift both come very exceedingly wealthy families, and while Swift is clearly a genuinely gifted songwriter, good connections likely played in the youthful success of both women. Nothing about Dunham, her book or her show, has ever struck me as deserving the uniformly fawning press she receives, and this article — which is truly “narrative journalism” meant only to propel an unsullied version of the desired line — makes no mention of the sometimes troubling air of “truthiness” within Dunham’s memoir.

Are men permitted to flirt? Should they be encouraged?

Are Men Permitted to Flirt? Should They Be Encouraged?SCALIA: My poor younger son, raised to be a gentleman, always holds the door open for people — male or female — as he leaves a shop. Men say thanks. Older women say thank you. Several times, though, younger women have cursed at him (and in one case literally screamed at him, and made a scene) because his small, genial gesture was taken as a “microaggression” against her strong womanhood.
Because strong women fall to pieces at a genderless social nicety, or something.
So, yeah, I think a guy who has been charming and inoffensive should be told so. In a world where the common courtesy of holding a door open for the next person is cause for high public drama and recrimination, men could use some help in gauging the parameters, and also a little encouragement that they are worthy of a kind response, and to be seen as something more than a bag of chromosomes.

Pope Francis planning encyclical, strategy to address climate change in 2015

Pope Francis’s edict on climate change will anger deniers and US churches | World news | The Guardian: He has been called the “superman pope”, and it would be hard to deny that Pope Francis has had a good December. Cited by President Barack Obama as a key player in the thawing relations between the US and Cuba, the Argentinian pontiff followed that by lecturing his cardinals on the need to clean up Vatican politics. But can Francis achieve a feat that has so far eluded secular powers and inspire decisive action on climate change?

It looks as if he will give it a go. In 2015, the pope will issue a lengthy message on the subject to the world’s 1.2 billion Catholics, give an address to the UN general assembly and call a summit of the world’s main religions.

"Time spent with the sick is holy time": Pope releases Sapientia Cordis to mark 2015 World Day of the Sick



---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Blogtrottr <busybee@blogtrottr.com>
Date: Tuesday, December 30, 2014
Subject: RADIO VATICANA: Pope Francis' message for 2015 World Day of the Sick
To: kcknight@gmail.com


AUTHOR=webteam@vaticanradio.org:

{The theme of Pope Francis's message for the World Day of Sick being celebrated on 11 February 2015 is "I was eyes to the blind and feet to the lame," taken from the book of Job.}

 

Please find below the English translation of the full text of the Pope's message:

 

Sapientia Cordis

"I was eyes to the blind, and feet to the lame"

(Job 29:15)

Dear Brothers and Sisters,

On this, the twenty-third World Day of the Sick, begun by Saint John Paul II, I turn to all of you who are burdened by illness and are united in various ways to the flesh of the suffering Christ, as well as to you, professionals and volunteers in the field of health care.

This year's theme invites us to reflect on a phrase from the Book of Job: "I was eyes to the blind, and feet to the lame" (Job 29:15).  I would like to consider this phrase from the perspective of "sapientia cordis" – the wisdom of the heart.

1.            This "wisdom" is no theoretical, abstract knowledge, the product of reasoning.  Rather, it is, as Saint James describes it in his Letter, "pure, then peaceable, gentle, open to reason, full of mercy and good fruits, without uncertainty or insincerity" (3:17).  It is a way of seeing things infused by the Holy Spirit in the minds and the hearts of those who are sensitive to the sufferings of their brothers and sisters and who can see in them the image of God.  So let us take up the prayer of the Psalmist: "Teach us to number our days that we may gain a heart of wisdom" (Ps 90:12).  This "sapientia cordis", which is a gift of God, is a compendium of the fruits of the World Day of the Sick.

2.            Wisdom of the heart means serving our brothers and sisters.  Job's words: "I was eyes to the blind, and feet to the lame", point to the service which this just man, who enjoyed a certain authority and a position of importance amongst the elders of his city, offered to those in need.  His moral grandeur found expression in the help he gave to the poor who sought his help and in his care for orphans and widows (Job 29:12-13).

Today too, how many Christians show, not by their words but by lives rooted in a genuine faith, that they are "eyes to the blind" and "feet to the lame"!  They are close to the sick in need of constant care and help in washing, dressing and eating.  This service, especially when it is protracted, can become tiring and burdensome.  It is relatively easy to help someone for a few days but it is difficult to look after a person for months or even years, in some cases when he or she is no longer capable of expressing gratitude.  And yet, what a great path of sanctification this is!  In those difficult moments we can rely in a special way on the closeness of the Lord, and we become a special means of support for the Church's mission.

3.            Wisdom of the heart means being with our brothers and sisters.  Time spent with the sick is holy time.  It is a way of praising God who conforms us to the image of his Son, who "came not to be served but to serve, and to give his life as a ransom for many" (Mt 20:28).  Jesus himself said: "I am among you as one who serves" (Lk 22:27).

With lively faith let us ask the Holy Spirit to grant us the grace to appreciate the value of our often unspoken willingness to spend time with these sisters and brothers who, thanks to our closeness and affection, feel more loved and comforted.  How great a lie, on the other hand, lurks behind certain phrases which so insist on the importance of "quality of life" that they make people think that lives affected by grave illness are not worth living!

4.            Wisdom of the heart means going forth from ourselves towards our brothers and sisters.  Occasionally our world forgets the special value of time spent at the bedside of the sick, since we are in such a rush; caught up as we are in a frenzy of doing, of producing, we forget about giving ourselves freely, taking care of others, being responsible for others.  Behind this attitude there is often a lukewarm faith which has forgotten the Lord's words: "You did it unto me' (Mt 25:40).

For this reason, I would like once again to stress "the absolute priority of 'going forth from ourselves toward our brothers and sisters' as one of the two great commandments which ground every moral norm and as the clearest sign for discerning spiritual growth in response to God's completely free gift" (Evangelii Gaudium, 179).  The missionary nature of the Church is the wellspring of an "effective charity and a compassion which understands, assists and promotes" (ibid).

5.            Wisdom of the heart means showing solidarity with our brothers and sisters while not judging them.  Charity takes time.  Time to care for the sick and time to visit them.  Time to be at their side like Job's friends: "And they sat with him on the ground seven days and seven nights, and no one spoke a word to him, for they saw that his suffering was very great" (Job 2:13).  Yet Job's friends harboured a judgement against him: they thought that Job's misfortune was a punishment from God for his sins.  True charity is a sharing which does not judge, which does not demand the conversion of others; it is free of that false humility which, deep down, seeks praise and is self-satisfied about whatever good it does.

Job's experience of suffering finds its genuine response only in the cross of Jesus, the supreme act of God's solidarity with us, completely free and abounding in mercy.  This response of love to the drama of human pain, especially innocent suffering, remains for ever impressed on the body of the risen Christ; his glorious wounds are a scandal for faith but also the proof of faith (cf. Homily for the Canonization of John XXIII and John Paul II, 27 April 2014).

Even when illness, loneliness and inability make it hard for us to reach out to others, the experience of suffering can become a privileged means of transmitting grace and a source for gaining and growing in sapientia cordis.  We come to understand how Job, at the end of his experience, could say to God: "I had heard of you by the hearing of the ear, but now my eye sees you" (42:5).  People immersed in the mystery of suffering and pain, when they accept these in faith, can themselves become living witnesses of a faith capable of embracing suffering, even without being able to understand its full meaning.

6.            I entrust this World Day of the Sick to the maternal protection of Mary, who conceived and gave birth to Wisdom incarnate: Jesus Christ, our Lord.

O Mary, Seat of Wisdom, intercede as our Mother for all the sick and for those who care for them!  Grant that, through our service of our suffering neighbours, and through the experience of suffering itself, we may receive and cultivate true wisdom of heart!

With this prayer for all of you, I impart my Apostolic Blessing.

#kk2churchnews

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Monday, December 29, 2014

Physicians have ceased to use the term "suffering"...



---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Blogtrottr <busybee@blogtrottr.com>
Date: Monday, December 29, 2014
Subject: DIGG: Why Doctors Ignore Suffering
To: kcknight@gmail.com


AUTHOR=Unknown: Physicians have ceased to use the term suffering. In medical circles, uttering of the "s" word within hospital wards and outpatient clinics occurs with approximately the same frequency as does the shouting of racial slurs. It's just not done. #kk2curators

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President of Argentina adopts Jewish godson to 'stop him turning into a werewolf'



---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Blogtrottr <busybee@blogtrottr.com>
Date: Monday, December 29, 2014
Subject: DIGG: President Of Argentina Adopts Jewish Godson To 'Stop Him Turning Into A Werewolf'
To: kcknight@gmail.com


AUTHOR=Unknown: The President of Argentina has adopted a young Jewish man as her godson to stop him turning into a werewolf. President Christina Fernández de Kirchner met Yair Tawil and his family at her office last week to mark the unusual ceremony, which dates back more than 100 years. #kk2curators

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Fwd: MARK SHEA: Phil Lawler wrestles with a mysteriously popular desperate lie from Catholic torture defenders



---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Blogtrottr <busybee@blogtrottr.com>
Date: Monday, December 29, 2014
Subject: MARK SHEA: Phil Lawler Wrestles with a Mysteriously Popular Desperate Lie from Catholic Torture Defenders
To: kcknight@gmail.com


AUTHOR=Mark SheaSHEA:

The man has written wisely and well on the this beloved-by-far-too-many-conservative-Catholics mortal sin and, as a result, heard the same foolish lies in defense of it as I get on a daily basis.

He writes:

Since you've been so persistent on the question of torture, I'm curious whether you've been hearing the same odd argument that is turning up in many of the critical emails that I've received.

Literally dozens of people have written to tell me that the Church condemns torture when it is used to extract a confession, but not when it's used to gain information. I'm having trouble taking that argument seriously; I don't understand how a reasonable intelligent person could find a morally significant distinction there. Have you been getting that argument too, or is it something peculiar to my readers?

{When the Church is clearly teaching something that people Catholics desperately wish to avoid, the general method for ignoring bloody obvious Church teaching is to find a theologian somewhere who will tell them what their itching ears want to hear, and then raise him to the status of the Magisterium, despite the fact that he literally stands in complete isolation from the rest of the Church's witness. We saw this with the exaltation of people like Charles Curran and Hans Kung with lefties on their beloved Pelvic Issues.}

Now the Torture Defending Right is doing the same thing. The theologian in this case, is Fr. Brian Harrison.  In addition to rushing to defend Bob Sungenis from his bishop's censure of his loony antisemitism) Fr. Harrison also immediately set to work devising a defense for the use of torture in interrogation so hair-splitting and tendentious that only a dedicated torture defender could take it as gospel: see here and here

Tom Kreitzberg sums things up perfectly in his excellent rebuttal of this desperate attempt to find wiggle room for torture when he describes it as precisely the sort of logic chopping that gives Roman Catholic theology a bad name http://disputations.blogspot.com/2006_11_01_archive.html#116248044980889857  It's this piece that is the source of the ridiculous arguments you are hearing. And despite the fact that Fr. Harrisoh stands absolutely and totally alone in the theological community and without one single shred of support from any bishop in the whole wide world, he has been treated as an alternate Magisterium on this question by Catholic torture defenders for years.

The irony is that Fr. Harrison himself finally abandoned the argument when Benedict closed that loophole he was straining to keep open

I wish to state that I accept the Holy Father's judgement on this matter, and so no longer hold that Catholics can ever legitimately defend the use of torture – not even in extreme circumstances to gain potentially life-saving information from known terrorists. Accordingly, the last sentence of the above article, regarding "the present status quaestionis" on torture, should now be taken as withdrawn.

Benedict's statement, for those who don't know, is this: "I reiterate that the prohibition against torture "cannot be contravened under any circumstances."

You should point your readers to those facts at every opportunity.  I wish Fr. Harrison would take these writings down and not leave them up for torture defenders to keep referring to as some kind of magisterial proof for their position.

Thanks for fighting the good fight.  The cheering for mortal sin by "prolife" "faithful" Catholics is an ugly stain on the Church's witness. That it still continues at this late date, after the release of the Senate Report, is even more appalling. There's no sense left in it, other than the insane "sense" of needing to go on justifying evil lest one have to admit one was obviously wrong. It's People of the Lie stuff at this stage. That's why the focus is now on a) appealing to naked liars like Dick "The Ends Justify the Means" Cheney as "proof" that "it worked"; b) refusal to acknowledge that the ends do not justify the means whether it worked or not; c) refusa to acknowledge that the Report documents that it did not, in fact, work and did, in fact, harm intel-gathering; d)endless quibbling about waterboarding as though all the other horrors in the Senate Report never happened; e) genetic fallacy lies which try to argue that the Democratic authorship of the report somehow make the copiously documented fact in the report go away; and f) (with Catholic Torture Defenders) absurd hair-splitting appeals to the now-disowned-by-the-author claim that the use of torture in interrogation might be legitimate.

It is long past time for Catholics to demonstrate some courage and stop trying to defend this miserable stain on the US and the American Catholic Church's members who have fought so hard to defend it. When "prolife" people are going to the mat to defend anal rape, freezing an innocent man to death, forcing people to stand on broken feet in stress positions, standing on a man's broken leg, and threatening to murder children and cut the throats of innocent women, the "prolife" movement can well and truly be termed a thing so perverted that its witness is dead till it renounces such prostitution for the sake of worldly power.

May our tortured Lord forgive us our cowardice and may the Holy Innocents pray for us that we be consistent in our prolife witness and abandon this horrendous failure to be fully prolife.

#kk3always

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The possibility of complex life in the universe is astronomically small...



---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Blogtrottr <busybee@blogtrottr.com>
Date: Sunday, December 28, 2014
Subject: ARCHDIOCESE OF WASHINGTON: A Recent Article Ponders How Rare Earth Is, And How Astronomical the Possibility of Complex Life in the Universe Is!
To: kcknight@gmail.com


AUTHOR=Msgr. Charles PopePOPE: We have discussed on the blog before how the mere statistical presumption that since there are so many stars, there are billions of other earth-like planets in the universe which likely support life similar to ours may be a flawed notion. Why? Because it is not just one or two things that make earth what […] #kk3always

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Fwd: CRUX: On the feast of the Holy Family, Pope Francis gives a shout-out to big families



---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Blogtrottr <busybee@blogtrottr.com>
Date: Sunday, December 28, 2014
Subject: CRUX: On the feast of the Holy Family, Pope Francis gives a shout-out to big families
To: kcknight@gmail.com


AUTHOR=John L. Allen Jr.ALLEN: On the feast of the Holy Family, and looking ahead to a 2015 in which concern for the family will once again be at the top of his personal to-do list, Pope Francis on Sunday urged politicians to make support for large families a priority.

"In a world often marked by egoism, a large family is a school of solidarity and of mission that's of benefit to the entire society," Francis said.

The comments came in an audience the pontiff held Sunday morning with an Italian association of large families, which filled the Vatican's Paul VI audience hall with children, parents, and grandparents. Children were seated on the stairs leading up to the stage where Francis spoke, and he spent considerable time interacting with them. #kk3always

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Fwd: ANDREA GAGLIARDUCCI: A must today as ever: Talking about God in light of Pope Francis’ missionary push



---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Blogtrottr <busybee@blogtrottr.com>
Date: Sunday, December 28, 2014
Subject: ANDREA GAGLIARDUCCI: A must today as ever: Talking about God in light of Pope Francis' missionary push
To: kcknight@gmail.com


AUTHOR=Andrea GagliarducciGAGLIARDUCCI:

On February 26, 2013, two days before the end of Benedict XVI's pontificate, the Czech priest Tomas Halik launched in Rome the Italian edition of one of his most important books, "To the far ones nearby." And on March 13, 2014, while Jorge Mario Bergolio was on his first year as a Pope, the same Halik won the almost 2 million dollars of the Templeton Prize that is awarded to "those who have contribute to elevate the world's spiritual profile." At the end of this coming August, Halik will be in Rome's environs again, and to be precise, in Castel Gandolfo, where he will lecture on "How to speak about God in the contemporary world." The lecture will be given to the members of the Ratzinger Schuelerkreis, the circle of former Ratzinger students that for last two years has also included young students of Ratzinger's theology.

Benedict XVI himself picks the topic of the annual Schuelerkreis meeting out of a set of three that his former students propose to him for the forthcoming meeting at the end of each gathering. This year – recounted Fr. Stephan Horn, who was Ratzinger's assistant at the Regensburg University, and who is currently one of the coordinators of the Circle – the Pope Emeritus took longer to reflect than normal, and finally communicated the topic of the meeting at the end of November. Was his a prophetic choice?

The question arises while we are nearing the beginning of the third year of Pope Francis' pontificate. The topic of evangelization was pivotal during the General Congregations, i.e., the pre-conclave meetings of Cardinals. According to what the Cardinals said after the conclave, they all focused on the need for a change of narrative, so that the Church would be more appelaing and trusted and less constrained by scandals and by the cangrene of internal carreerism. Another item is the famous speech Cardinal Jorge Mario Bergoglio delivered during the pre-conclave meetings, which Pope Francis allowed to be made public. The speech zeroed in on the need for the Church to go to peripheries, even to existential peripeheries, and announce the Gospel.

This is the program Pope Francis has followed ever since. Every gesture of the Pope during the year and a half of his pontificate was intended to clean up the image of an self-referential Church and to make the Church visible in the peripheries. This program can be discerned through the many events of his pontificate: his choice to make his first trip to the small Italian island of Lampedusa, an asylusm-seekers destination for refugees in the Mediterranean; the first consistory for the creation of new cardinals, surprising since many of the new red hats hailed from dioceses that never stood out in any way; the desire to demonstrate the Church's intention to clean up its finances and organization by hiring expensive external consultants; the establishment of a Council of Cardinals, made up almost in its entirety by people not in the Curia, in order to show that it is time to get out from the self-referentiality of the curial offices; and finally his wish to show that the Pope is close to the people: he spends hours with sick people at the end of every general audience, he carries his bag by himself when he boards a plane, he refuses to use a bullet-proof car.

These and many other gestures have shown the face of Pope Francis' 'revolution'.

This 'revolution' has some pros. For example, the Church emerged almost unscathed after it was attacked by two United Nation committees. The Committee for the UN Convention for the Rights of the Child and the Committe for the UN Convention Against Tortureorchestrated a campaign against the sovereignty of the Holy See. The Committees issued two reports – a process that is followed for every State – that pointed the finger admonishingly against the Church, threatened its sovereignty by demanding changes in canon law and instrumentalizing clergy pedophilia as a rationale for this purpose. 

But none of this criticism seems to stick to the Church. Pope Francis can also address hot issues without any negative media backlash. This happened, for instance, when he delivered a speech to the European Parliament on November, 25. In that address, he touched on hot issues such as the Christian roots of Europe, the concept of the natural family that European legislation no longer takes into consideration, and abortion. But none of these issues was emphasized or criticized by the press as happened in the past; instead, the secular media chose to highlight the less critical issues of the speech, such as immigration, poverty and social exclusion.

Yet these pros also indicate the other face of the coin, for example, that a Church with a cleaned-up image, one that is so attentive to social issues, is a Church that is not able to speak about God in the deepest sense. The search for a change in the way the Word is announced has brought this pontificate to embrace messages that the secular world loves precisely because Pope Francis converses with the secular world on issues that interest it. But when he speaks about faith he does so primarily through the lens of popular piety. What would happen if the Pope's discourse focused on the Word itself, on the deepest sense of the Gospel, more than on its concrete application?

It is not by chance that Benedict XVI told his former students to discuss the topic, "How to speak about God in the contemporary word." We need to speak about God in the deepest sense while we are experiencing the extraordinary effects of Pope Francis' bounce, attested by the huge amount of publicity surrouding him.

True, the number of people attending the Sunday Angelus and the general audiences has increased to "bombastic numbers," according to a source who works in the Prefecture for the Pontifical Household. And it is also true that Mass participation has increased, as recently reported by the Pew Forum.

On the other hand, it is perhaps also true that we are lacking the next step. How much are the faithful who have returned to the Church, moved to do so by papal slogans and by the Church's social action programs, able then to live out fully the presence of God? How much is a Church that basks in its positive public image able then to evangelize?

This is the eternal conundrum of the Church, divided as it is between evangelization and the need for a good public image. The second has seemingly prevailed. The professionalization of media communication, based on the model of the secular world, has also led to a personalization of comunication, completely focused on the leader. Nowadays, Pope Francis is leading the Church forward in the polls the same way that political leaders attempt to lead their parties forward in an effort to capture public opinion. The leader now precedes the institution, and everything that happens is credited to him. In the United States, President Barack Obama has made many unpopular decisions and – according to some observers – even un-constitutional ones, but his popularity has not decreased as a consequence: a universally respected leader can act this way without negative consequences.

This policy cannot be applied to the Church, a universal institution serving the world. Beyond the Pope's popularity, one must consider the institution that remains even while people within it come and go. The institution is expression of the will of God, and what it has to communicate must be focused solely on Him.

Perhaps Benedict XVI felt that God was being marginalized and that media communication was overtaking evangelization. In the midst of the profesionalization of Vatican communications, the Pope Emeritus has perhaps felt the need to return to speaking about God. By choosing this topic, he indicates a path that goes beyond any communication campaign and the popularity of any Pope.

Who knows if Pope Francis will take this advice? Pope Francis and the Pope Emeritus are often in touch – albeit no news of a meeting between the two for Christmas greetings has surfaced this year – and Pope Francis has stated clearly that the Pope Emeritus is an institution. Benedict XVI has also served as a sort of hidden advisor for Pope Francis, and he humbly sends him suggestions and counsel, whenever it is requested. With his pick of the next Schuelerkreis topic, he indicated a path forward. Will the Church be able to follow it?

#kk3always

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Beijing to publish list of "legal" religious venues to "eradicate" illegal religious activities



---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Blogtrottr <busybee@blogtrottr.com>
Date: Monday, December 29, 2014
Subject: ASIA NEWS: CHINA - Beijing to publish list of "legal" religious venues to "eradicate" illegal religious activities
To: kcknight@gmail.com


AUTHOR=Unknown: The list will be completed within two years. It already includes 16,140 registered Buddhist and Taoist temples and places of worship. For 20 years, the UN has called on Beijing to drop the distinction between "legal" and "illegal" religious activities. A law on religions seems urgent. Taoist and Buddhist monks criticise the use of temples and places of worship as moneymaking tourist destinations. #kk2churchnews

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Sunday, December 28, 2014

"The Second Annunciation": The Gospel Reading for the Feast of the Holy Family

The Sacred Page: "The Second Annunciation": The Gospel Reading for the Feast of the Holy FamilyBARBER: The precise language of Mary and Joseph "presenting" the child Jesus in the temple is significant. On one level it recalls figures such as Samuel, who in the Old Testament were dedicated to God from their youth by their parents. However, there seems to be more than just a "dedication" going on here.

The word translated, “to present", is paristÄ“mi. As Pope Benedict observes in volume 3 of his work, Jesus of Nazareth, the term is specifically used for "presenting" a "sacrifice". See, for example, Romans 12:1: "I appeal to you therefore, brethren, by the mercies of God, to present [paristÄ“mi] your bodies as a living sacrifice, holy and acceptable to God, which is your spiritual worship."

It seems that for Luke Jesus is in the temple as the sacrifice. Later, Luke will make it abundantly clear that Jesus offered his life as a sacrifice (see, e.g., Jesus eucharistic words at the Last Supper). Here Jesus' sacrificial death is anticipated, though obviously in an obscure way.

Dave Barry's Year in Review 2014

Dave Barry's Year in Review 2014 | The Miami Herald: It was a year of mysteries. To list some of the more baffling ones: A huge airliner simply vanished, and to this day nobody has any idea what happened to it, despite literally thousands of hours of intensive speculation on CNN.

For devotees of stained-glass windows, these may be the dark ages...

Window Pains: Stained Glass Faces Dark Days - WSJ: When it comes to stained-glass windows in churches, Kevin O’Dea’s views are crystal clear.

“Honestly, it makes me more comfortable not to see any at all,” says Mr. O’Dea, a 34-year-old real-estate agent from Norfolk, Va., who belongs to a nondenominational church called Wave, which has a 2,500-seat, windowless worship space.

Wave’s contemporary look—there is no steeple and no organ, either—gives the church a vibe more like a rock venue than a house of worship.

A peek inside the Vatican Library, tonight on 60 Minutes...

Tonight on CBS, a Peek Inside the Vatican LibrarySCHIFFER: Tonight on CBS, viewers will be treated to a special hour of “60 Minutes Presents: �Inside the Vatican.” �Scott Pelley will profile Pope Francis, who is surprising the world by spurning tradition; and Morley Safer will lead viewers on a tour of the Vatican Library.
The program will air at 7:30 p.m. Eastern Time and Pacific Time. �To whet your appetite for what is certain to be a fascinating disclosure of rarely seen documents, let me tell you a little about the things I’ve seen in that hallowed space.

If you're Catholic, Christmas isn't a day. It's a season...

If You’re Catholic, Christmas Isn’t a Day. It’s a Season.HAMILTON: Catholics don’t regard Christmas as one, big rousing day of overeating and gift giving.
We see it as a joyful season of the Church. It lasts right up until we celebrate the visit the Wise Men paid to the baby Jesus.
That kind of season thinking is hard for Americans, tied as we are to jobs and paychecks. We feel lucky if we can get off work long enough to celebrate that one big day. But a “Season?”
No can do.
I understand this well. I’ve never been able to really “do” a Church season. I was too beset by other things. But I’m going to attempt doing Christmas the Catholic way this year, which is to say, that I’m going to do a bit of extended Christmassing.

Celebrate the Twelve Days of Christmas this year...

Twelve Days of Christmas - The Catholic ThingThe Catholic ThingMCCLOSKEY: One of the delights of studying for the priesthood in Rome (many decades ago now) was the opportunity to experience the reality of the complete Christmas season: one that did not begin with a mass-market assault on Thanksgiving evening and build to a consuming crescendo on Christmas Day, but instead began with Midnight Mass on Christmas Eve and continued for eleven days after December 25.

During this time – the “Twelve Days” of Christmas carol fame – the Church celebrates many significant feast days that help us to go deeper into the celebration of Our Lord’s nativity and our understanding of his coming to secure the means of our salvation. Through his birth of the Virgin Mary, the new Eve who by her Yes to God and His archangel became the means of ushering our Savior into the world, Christ began his earthly journey to his death for us on Cavalry some 33 years later, and his resurrection from the dead three days after that.

The day the Pintupi Nine entered the modern world

BBC News - The day the Pintupi Nine entered the modern world: In 1984 a group of Australian Aboriginal people living a traditional nomadic life were encountered in the heart of the Gibson desert in Western Australia. They had been unaware of the arrival of Europeans on the continent, let alone cars - or even clothes.

If you want to know how Australian Aboriginal peoples lived for 40,000 years, just ask Yukultji. She stepped into the 20th Century just 30 years ago. She is the youngest member of the Pintupi Nine, the last family of nomads to roam the territory around Lake Mackay, a vast glistening salt lake spanning 3,500 sq km (1,350 sq miles) between the Gibson and Great Sandy deserts of Western Australia.

Four charts that defined the world in 2014

Four Charts That Defined the World in 2014 - The New Yorker: Many of the economic trends that have defined countries’ fortunes over the past year are especially striking when seen visually—how in the U.S., for example, unemployment declined, or how, in Russia, the ruble plummeted. Here are four charts that reveal trends with particularly far-reaching implications for the global economy as a whole

Never mind the headlines. We've never lived in such peaceful times (unless you're unborn)...

The world is not falling apart: The trend lines reveal an increasingly peaceful period in history.: It’s a good time to be a pessimist. ISIS, Crimea, Donetsk, Gaza, Burma, Ebola, school shootings, campus rapes, wife-beating athletes, lethal cops—who can avoid the feeling that things fall apart, the center cannot hold? Last year Martin Dempsey, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, testified before a Senate committee that the world is “more dangerous than it has ever been.” This past fall, Michael Ignatieff wrote of “the tectonic plates of a world order that are being pushed apart by the volcanic upward pressure of violence and hatred.” Two months ago, the New York Times columnist Roger Cohen lamented, “Many people I talk to, and not only over dinner, have never previously felt so uneasy about the state of the world. The search is on for someone to dispel foreboding and embody, again, the hope of the world.”

16 tips on how to make a good confession, and how to avoid the derp face...

A priest's strategy for confession: Father Steve Schultz, parochial vicar of Our Lady of Angels Church in Woodbridge, Virginia, offered the following tips on going to confession via his Facebook page this weekend.

A brilliant collection of logical fallacy posters

STUDENT WORK: LOGICAL FALLACY POSTERS on Behance: A logical fallacy is simply an error in reasoning. Although logical fallacies are often considered the domain of philosophers and attorneys (those who are experts at argumentation), it is important for everyone to have at least some level of awareness with the basic rules of reason. Communication designers should also be aware of such principles so that we can make strong arguments for the clients, products and services we represent and so that we don’t drift toward the same unethical tactics so common within our industry.

Why can't non-Catholics receive Holy Communion?

Mama Needs Coffee: Why can't non-Catholics receive Holy Communion?JENNYUEBBING: The Church does not owe me anything. Jesus didn't die for my sins in order that I may vaguely acknowledge Him in some kind of moral therapeutic deistic fashion. So what if I have to stand in a drafty gym for 90 minutes on Christmas Eve, so that the visitors who have swollen our attendance by 400% can have a seat for their biannual pilgrimage -- isn't it worth it?

Because what if somebody does come back because of Christmas? What if this year is "the year" that something clicks in their heart and head and the blinding light from the manger cracks open a channel �of grace into their soul and...oh, holy night.

Wouldn't that be something?

And then, oh what joy, if that revert or convert-to-be were to formally approach the Church via RCIA and ask to be received into full communion, to become one with the Bride of Christ and to be welcomed into the mystery of the Sacraments.

That's what it's all about.

Fwd: TOM PERNA: Quick Lessons from the Catechism: The Family in God’s Plan


---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Blogtrottr <busybee@blogtrottr.com>
Date: Sun, Dec 28, 2014 at 7:20 AM
Subject: TOM PERNA: Quick Lessons from the Catechism: The Family in God's Plan
To: kcknight@gmail.com


AUTHOR=Tom PernaPERNA:

Today in the Latin Rite of the Catholic Church, which is the Sunday within the Octave of the Nativity of the Lord, we commemorate the feast of the Holy Family of Jesus, Mary and Joseph. It's today that we try to understand with our finite minds the infinite and unconditional love and sacrifice that existed between Jesus Christ and his parents, Mary and Joseph.

On this feast of the Holy Family in 1964, Blessed Pope Paul VI said,

"The home of Nazareth is the school where we begin to understand the life of Jesus – the school of the Gospel. First, then, a lesson of silence. May esteem for silence, that admirable and indispensable condition of mind, revive in us. . . A lesson on family life."

Since the perfect example for every Christian family today and throughout the history of the Church is the Holy Family, I found it fitting today to share with you what the Catechism of the Catholic Church teaches on the family in God's plan –

"Honor your father and your mother" [Deut 5:16; Mk 7:10] (#2247).

According to the fourth commandment, God has willed that, after him, we should honor our parents and those whom he has vested with authority for our good (#2248).

The conjugal community is established upon the covenant and consent of the spouses. Marriage and family are ordered to the good of the spouses, to the procreation and the education of children (#2249).

The Holy Family - Raphel

The Holy Family with Palm Tree – Raphael

"The well-being of the individual person and of both human and Christian society is closely bound up with the healthy state of conjugal and family life" [GS 47 § 1] (#2250).

Children owe their parents respect, gratitude, just obedience, and assistance. Filial respect fosters harmony in all of family life (#2251).

Parents have the first responsibility for the education of their children in the faith, prayer, and all the virtues. They have the duty to provide as far as possible for the physical and spiritual needs of their children (#2252).

Parents should respect and encourage their children's vocations. They should remember and teach that the first calling of the Christian is to follow Jesus (#2253).

For a complete understanding of the role of the family in God's plan, I would suggest also reading paragraphs 2196-2233 in the Catechism of the Catholic Church. Also check out my blog posts – The 20th Anniversary of the Year of the Family and 12 Quotes from Blessed Pope John Paul II on the Role of the Christian Family in the Modern World.

In a time and culture when the traditional family is being attacked, when there are many attacks on the beauty of marriage between one man and one woman, let us pray with great fervor that we may have the strength to withstand these attacks and visibly witness for the world the truth, beauty, and goodness of traditional marriage and family. May the Holy Family pray for us as we look toward their perfect example of love and sacrifice.


#kk2mugshot

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Fwd: CRUX: It's Christmas for several more days. Time to watch Christmas movies!



---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Blogtrottr <busybee@blogtrottr.com>
Date: Saturday, December 27, 2014
Subject: CRUX: Christmas Day is over … time to watch Christmas movies!
To: kcknight@gmail.com


AUTHOR=Steven D. GreydanusGREYDANUS: In the malls, Christmas is over, and the post-Christmas sales are underway. At the same time, for many Christians who have sought to resist market-driven "Christmas creep" and celebrate the weeks prior to Christmas as the vigil of Advent, the Christmas season has only just begun.

The Christmas season unfolds in stages. The eight days from Christmas to Jan. 1 — to Catholics, the solemnity of Mary the Mother of God — are celebrated as the Octave of Christmas. The "Twelve Days of Christmas" take us to Jan. 6, traditionally Epiphany, celebrated by Hispanics as Three Kings Day. (In some countries, including the United States, Epiphany is now celebrated on the first Sunday after Jan. 1; in 2015, that is Jan. 4.) The Christmas season doesn't end until the feast of the Baptism of the Lord (in 2015, that's on Sunday, Jan. 11).#kk3always

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Fwd: CRUX: The Top 5 over-covered Vatican stories of 2015



---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Blogtrottr <busybee@blogtrottr.com>
Date: Sunday, December 28, 2014
Subject: CRUX: The Top 5 over-covered Vatican stories of 2015
To: kcknight@gmail.com


AUTHOR= John L. Allen JrALLEN: Typically my final column of the year is devoted to under-covered Vatican stories from the past 12 months, on the premise that the Vatican doesn't get the same attention in the American press as the White House or Congress, and so important developments often slip through the cracks.

That's not so, however, in the era of Pope Francis. #kk2churchnews

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Pope's Sunday Angelus: "The Holy Family is holy because it is centered on Jesus"



---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Blogtrottr <busybee@blogtrottr.com>
Date: Sunday, December 28, 2014
Subject: RADIO VATICANA: Pope at Angelus: my thoughts with those from missing plane
To: kcknight@gmail.com


AUTHOR=webteam@vaticanradio.org:

(Vatican Radio) {Pope Francis said on Sunday that "his thoughts are with those on board the missing AirAsia plane that disappeared during a flight between Indonesia and Singapore."  He added he was also thinking of two separate accidents involving two merchant ships and a ferry in the Adriatic Sea.}  "I am close with my affection and prayer," the Pope said, to the families and loved ones who are undergoing "these difficult situations with apprehension and suffering" and also to those involved in the rescue operations. His words of solidarity came at the end of his Angelus address on the feast of the Holy Family in which he spoke about how the light coming from the Holy Family encourages us to offer human warmth and where he also stressed the important role played by grandparents in the family setting.

Pope Francis said the infant Jesus with his mother Mary and with St. Joseph are a shining example of mercy and salvation for the entire world.  "This light which comes from the Holy Family encourages us to offer human warmth in those family situation in which, for various reasons, there is a lack of peace and harmony and forgiveness. Our concrete solidarity is just as present, especially when it comes to families who are undergoing difficult situations because of illness, lack of work, discrimination and the need to emigrate."

At that point, the Pope departed from his prepared text to urge all those present to pray in silence with him for families facing these difficulties and who lack understanding and unity. Jesus, he continued "is the person who brings the (young and old) generations closer together."  He is "the source of that love which unites family and people, overcoming every mistrust, isolation and distance."

Turning next to the role of grandparents, Pope Francis stressed "how important" their presence is within the family and society as a whole. "A good relationship between young and old people is a key element in the functioning of the civil and ecclesial community." he said. And when we look at the elderly couple in the Bible, Simeon and Anna, let's "give a round of applause to all the grandparents in the world."

The Pope explained how the message that comes from the Holy Family is a message of faith. "The family of Nazareth," he said, "is holy because it is centered on Jesus" and when a family has faith it gives them the strength to face up to difficult situations, just as it did for Mary and Joseph.  

#kk2churchnews

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Saturday, December 27, 2014

A homily for the Feast of the Holy Family



---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Blogtrottr <busybee@blogtrottr.com>
Date: Saturday, December 27, 2014
Subject: ARCHDIOCESE OF WASHINGTON: Focused on a Functional Family: A Homily for the Feast of the Holy Family
To: kcknight@gmail.com


AUTHOR=Msgr. Charles PopePOPE: Here in the middle of the Christmas Octave, the Church bids us to celebrate the Feast of the Holy Family. On the old calendar, the Feast of the Holy Family falls on the Sunday after Epiphany, which makes a little more sense since the gospels appointed for the feast often take us far forward in time mere days after He is born. The gospel this year is only forty days into the future, but today's gospel is still well past the Feast of the Epiphany, which we have yet to celebrate.

Nevertheless, here we are. Perhaps it is a good time to reflect on family life. For, at Christmas time, family and extended family often gather together.  We are also in the midst of a reflection by the Church at Synods in Rome on the modern problems associated with the family.  These problems are rooted in the loss of God's vision for human families and sexuality. Pray for the synod members, that they will look less to diseases now and more to the solutions given in God's Word. It is true that we must understand the problems, but it is even more important that we understand what God teaches and effectively proclaim it. #kk3always

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Vatican frees bare-breasted protester who attacked Nativity scene; forbids her ever to return

Vatican frees bare-breasted 'God is woman' protester; forbids her to ever return | BreakingNews.ie: The Holy See has released a radical feminist activist who bared her breasts in St Peter’s Square on Christmas Day and snatched the statue of Baby Jesus from the Vatican’s outdoor Nativity scene.
The Holy See prosecutor met Yana Zhdanova and decided to order her release, according to Vatican spokesman the Rev Federico Lombardi.
The Ukrainian protester was also ordered to never enter Vatican City State, including St Peter’s Basilica, or other Vatican property outside the city-state’s walls.

During this Octave of Christmas, unwrap a bit of silence...

For Post-Christmas: Unwrap a Bit of SilenceSCALIA: The silence of which we sing so wistfully at Midnight Mass, is at an all-time premium at Christmas; it is so difficult to find a silent night, let alone sit within one and become immersed in it, that the possibility of a seasonal soothing of the heart—a quieting of the grief of the world—seems the stuff of illusion and myth.
Christmas has, in too many ways, become the equivalent of an overdone theme-park vacation. By its end, one is knock-kneed with exhaustion and desperately in need of a genuine opportunity to rest.
A Christmas snow, like the one we’ve just had, does wonders to cull the silence. A few inches of white powder brings an unusual and welcome softening of sound—in cities, the hum of traffic is muffled; in the suburbs even the broom of the ubiquitous snowblower is reduced to a faint and unobtrusive whir, one that remains mostly beneath the surface of one’s awareness.

This is why Christmas should frighten humans, and by that fright bestow ineffable gladness

Holidays are Holy Days - Crisis MagazineRUTLER: There are two things to get right from the start about the mystery of Christmas. The first is that it was not peaceful. The angels sang of peace to men of goodwill but that was precisely what stirred things up. They were angels from eternity and we are humans in time. Even the holy lady Mary had to be calmed down by the archangel Gabriel. There is no description of what he looked like. Perhaps his appearance was that of a man, for that is how angels can assume a benevolent disguise and appear to us as “strangers unaware” (Hebrew 13:2). St. Joan of Arc could only say of Gabriel, that he was brilliant. If you think that is a legend, ask her soldiers. My father died on a cold winter day in the morning leaving me to comfort my grieving mother and that night all the heat went off in our country house. I looked in the directory for plumbers, not easy to get in a rural area, and picked one number out of more than a hundred and he appeared with astonishing celerity: a young man in overalls and curly gold hair with a sympathetic voice. After he repaired everything, he refused any money and for the next day the basement was filled with the perfume of roses. My untutored sense as the house became warm, was that my father was with the Lord.

Fwd: RADIO VATICANA: Pope to meet large families on feast of the Holy Family


---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Blogtrottr <busybee@blogtrottr.com>
Date: Sat, Dec 27, 2014 at 8:06 AM
Subject: RADIO VATICANA: Pope to meet large families on feast of the Holy Family
To: kcknight@gmail.com


AUTHOR=webteam@vaticanradio.org:

Pope Francis will mark the feast of the Holy Family of Nazareth on Sunday meeting some 7000 people belonging to large families of Italy.  Before his midday 'Angelus' prayer from his studio window overlooking St. Peter's Square, he will meet the group in Vatican's audience hall.  The meeting with the Pope is being organized by Italy's National Association of Large Families (ANFN), which is is marking its 10th anniversary with a national assembly on the theme, "The Family, Our Goal", Dec. 26-28.  The Italian Association of Large Families is a member of the European Large Families Confederation (ELFAC), which was constituted in 2004 and represents more than 50 million European citizens making up nearly 9 million large families.  Archbishop Vincenzo Paglia, the president of the Vatican's Pontifical Council for the Family, will celebrate a Mass for the families in the audience hall, before the meeting with the Pope.  

The feast of the Holy Family is celebrated in the Catholic Church on the Sunday between Christmas and New Year, or on Dec. 30.   This year the feast falls on Dec. 28, when the Church also marks the feast of the Holy Innocents, in commemoration of the massacre of young male children in Bethlehem by King Herod,  to avoid the loss of his throne to Jesus, the newborn King of the Jews. 

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