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Morning Coffee by George Mendoza |
4/6/25
Monday Morning Offering: 4/7
NIGHT PRAYER: Sunday 4/6

On Sundays, Night Prayer will focus on an element from the day's celebration of Mass. Tonight we reflect on several verses from today's first scripture:
Homily for April 6: Fidget spinners!
If a video doesn't appear above, click here!
4/5/25
Pause for Prayer: SUNDAY 4/6
Show me your love today, Lord...
Show me your love today, Lord...
Help me remember, Lord,
let me know you're near,
NIGHT PRAYER: Saturday 4/5

A disturbance and a tension I cannot seem to drive
And if I'm honest, there's quite a bit of fear
To sit here in this silence and really hear you
Will I listen to your voice when you speak?
Help me to see
Help me to do whatever you would ask of me
Help me to go
And I know that you're faithful
But I can barely breathe
God help me
But sometimes they are not and it leaves us torn inside
And in the middle we are left to wonder
Who we are, what you want and where we're going
Oh, such a mystery
I don't always understand
But I believe
It's one day at a time
But I know I'll be okay with your hand holding mine
So take all my resistance
Oh God I need your grace
One step and then the other, show me the way
Pause for Prayer: SATURDAY 4/5

Today's Pause for Prayer comes in a lighter-than-usual vein: I hope you'll enjoy it - and take it to heart...
Lent is a penitential season when we're encouraged to receive the Sacrament of Reconciliation, that is: to go to confession. Some folks look forward to doing this - others, not so much! Many just don't think they need to go. Whatever group you find yourself in, I'm pleased to offer you: A Dozen Reasons NOT to Go to Confession:
1) Your natural tendency to love God in all things and to love your neighbor as yourself causes you to walk about an inch off the ground on an invisible cloud of holiness.On the other hand, if these twelve reasons don't describe you and your circumstances, you just might want to consider availing yourself of this sacrament in preparation for the celebration of Easter.
2) Your husband/wife never tires of telling you what a perfect spouse you are.
3) Your faithfulness in getting yourself and your family to Sunday Mass is often mentioned by your pastor as a model for all Catholics.
4) You've been so faithful in honoring your mother and father that they’ve asked you to loosen up a little and enjoy yourself once in a while.
5) You've been so generous in helping the poor that you no longer can afford transportation to get to church for confession.
6) You speak to God in prayer so often that He sometimes asks if He can put you on hold for a few minutes.
7) You're so well known at school as an honest, hardworking and friendly student that you're often called to the Principal’s Office to offer your advice on school policy.
8) Your purity in thought, word and deed has been awarded a Good Housekeeping Seal of Approval.
9) You're so honest that you once felt guilty about stealing second base.
10) You're so completely content with what you have that winning the lottery would pose a moral dilemma prompting you to ask that another number be drawn.
11) Your efforts to what is just and to make peace (in your home, at work at school) have won you a nomination for the Nobel Prize.
12) You already come to the Sacrament of Reconciliation so often that coming in Lent would unnecessarily lengthen the line of others waiting to go to confession.
4/4/25
NIGHT PRAYER: Friday 4/4

Pause for Prayer: FRIDAY 4/4
This morning's post isn't quite a "pause for prayer" - but it's definitely a "pause for reflection."
At the Easter Vigil and at all the Masses on Easter Sunday, we will be asked:
- Do you reject the glamor of evil
- Do you reject Satan,
- Do you believe in God, the Father almighty,
- Do you believe in Jesus Christ,
- Do you believe in the Holy Spirit,
- Do you believe in
- Do you believe in the forgiveness of sins?
- Do you look for the resurrection of the dead
And we'll respond: I do, I do, I do!
Do we even understand the questions?
Here's a way to better understand the profession of faith, the renewal of our baptismal promises...
Fr. Bill Reiser, SJ has proposed some additional questions for us to ponder in preparation for Easter. His questions can be food for our prayer and fasting in this holy season.
- Do you accept Jesus as your teacher, as the example whom you will always imitate and as the one in whom the mystery of God’s love for the world has fully been revealed?
- Do you dedicate yourself to seeking the kingdom of God and God’s justice, to praying daily, to meditating on the Gospels and to celebrating the Eucharist faithfully and devoutly?
- Do you commit yourself to that
spirit of poverty and detachment that Jesus enjoined on his disciples,
and to resisting the spirit of consumerism and materialism that is so
strong in our culture?
- Do you accept responsibility for
building community, for being a person of compassion and reconciliation,
for being mindful of the poor and the oppressed, and for truly
forgiving those who have offended you?
- Will you try to thank and praise God
by your works and by your actions, in times of prosperity as well as in
moments of suffering, giving loyal witness to the risen Jesus by your
faith, by your hope, and by the style of your living?
- Do you surrender your life to God as
a disciple and companion of Jesus? Do you believe that God is the Lord
of history, sovereign over nations and peoples, and that God’s promise
to redeem all of creation from its bondage to death and decay will one
day be accomplished?
All of these questions, the traditional and the new ones, are offered
here for our Lenten reflection, prayer and action. Soon we’ll be
renewing our baptismal promises and professing our faith in God. Let us
pray for one another that this Lenten season of preparation will find
us ready to answer “I do!” with voices and hearts filled with faith.
TODAY is a FRIDAY in LENT
April 4 is a FRIDAY in LENT:
- a day of abstinence.
What does that mean?
For more on this topic, check out this earlier post...
Note: Individual, personal health concerns and "doctor's orders" always take precedence over regulations for fast and abstinence!