The South Star?

Did You Know? We all know of Polaris as “the North Star,” the pole star for the northern hemisphere, around which all the other stars seem to rotate each day. Right now the southern hemisphere does not have an equivalent star, however due to the wobble of the Earth’s axis the celestial poles make a circle in the sky every 26,000 years. Currently the south celestial pole is between bright stars, but by A.D. 4200 the star Gamma Chameleontis will function as the new “South Star.” LEARN MORE.

The Church Year: Apr. 23, 2012

Today is Monday of the 3rd week of Easter. The liturgical color is white.

 

Saints & Celebrations:

On April 23, in both the Ordinary Form and the Extraordinary Form, we celebrate St. George, martyred at Nicomedia, who died in A.D. 304. In the Ordinary Form, it is an optional memorial, and in the Extraordinary Form, it is a commemoration.

In the Ordinary Form, we also celebrate St. Adalbert, bishop and martyr. It is an optional memorial.

If you’d like to learn more about St. George, you can click here.

If you’d like to learn more about St. Adalbert, you can click here.

For information about other saints, blesseds, and feasts celebrated today, you can click here.

 

Readings:

To see today’s readings in the Ordinary Form, you can click here.

Or you can click play to listen to them:

 

Devotional Information:

According to the Holy See’s Letter on Some Aspects of Christian Meditation:

1. Many Christians today have a keen desire to learn how to experience a deeper and authentic prayer life despite the not inconsiderable difficulties which modern culture places in the way of the need for silence, recollection and meditation. The interest which in recent years has been awakened also among some Christians by forms of meditation associated with some eastern religions and their particular methods of prayer is a significant sign of this need for spiritual recollection and a deep contact with the divine mystery. Nevertheless, faced with this phenomenon, many feel the need for sure criteria of a doctrinal and pastoral character which might allow them to instruct others in prayer, in its numerous manifestations, while remaining faithful to the truth revealed in Jesus, by means of the genuine Tradition of the Church. This present letter seeks to reply to this urgent need, so that in the various particular Churches, the many different forms of prayer, including new ones, may never lose their correct personal and communitarian nature.

These indications are addressed in the first place to the Bishops, to be considered in that spirit of pastoral solicitude for the Churches entrusted to them, so that the entire people of God?priests, religious and laity?may again be called to pray, with renewed vigor, to the Father through the Spirit of Christ our Lord.

The Weekly Benedict: April 22, 2012

[NOTE FROM JIMMY: I want to say a very special thank you to Jeff Miller. I haven’t been able to post The Weekly Benedict as often as planned (which is to say, weekly), but Jeff has graciously volunteered to handle its composition and posting. Thanks, bro! BTW, be sure to check out Jeff’s awesome ebook version of The Weekly Benedict, linked below. And now, the Mr. Jeff Miller  . . . ]

This is a catchup version of The Weekly Benedict covering the last 30 days which includes the Pope’s trip to Mexico and Cuba, Holy Week, and Eastertide (subscribe hereget as an eBook version for your Kindle, iPod, iPad, Nook, or other eBook reader):

Angelus / Regina Caeli

25 March 2012 – Angelus

1 April 2010 – Angelus – Palm Sunday

9 April 2012 – Regina Caeli – Easter Monday

15 April 2012 – Regina Caeli – Second Sunday of Easter

Homilies

25 March 2012 – Holy Mass celebrated at the “Parque del Bicentenario” of León- Mexico

25 March 2012 – Celebration of Vespers with the Bishops of Mexico and of Latin America in the Cathedral of Our Most Holy Mother of Light, León

26 March 2012 – Holy Mass for the 400th anniversary of the the discovery of the image of the “Virgen de la Caridad del Cobre” at Antonio Maceo Square, Santiago de Cuba

28 March 2012 – Holy Mass at “Plaza de la Revolución”, La Habana

1st April 2012 – Palm Sunday – 27th World Youth Day

5 April 2012 – Chrism Mass

5 April 2012 – Mass of the Lord’s Supper

7 April 2012 – Easter Vigil

Speeches

23 March 2012 – Meeting of His Holiness Benedict XVI with journalists during the flight to Mexico

23 March 2012 – Welcome Ceremony at the International Airport of Guanajuato (León)

24 March 2012 – Greeting to the children gathered at Plaza de la Paz in Guanajuato (León)

25 March 2012 – Address improvised by the Holy Father on Sunday Evening in front of Miraflores College

26 March 2012 – Farewell Ceremony at the International Airport of Guanajuato

26 March 2012 – Welcome Ceremony at Antonio Maceo International Airport of Santiago de Cuba

27 March 2012 – Visit to the Shrine of the “Virgen de la Caridad del Cobre” (Santiago de Cuba)

28 March 2012 – Farewell Ceremony at José Martí International Airport (La Habana)

2 April 2 2012 – To young people from the Archdiocese of Madrid

6 April 2012 – Way of the Cross: Address of His Holiness Benedict XVI (Colosseum)

Messages

15 March 2012 – Messages for the 27th World Youth Day

22 March 22 2012 – Message for the Way of the Cross at Rome’s Rebibbia District Prison

24 March 2012 – Video Message on the occasion of the national meeting of the Church of France for the 50th anniversary of the opening of the Second Vatican Council [Lourdes, 24-25 March 2012]

8 April 2012 – “Urbi et Orbi” – Easter 2012

General Audiences

14 March 2012

4 April 2012 – Apostolic Journey to Mexico and to the Republic of Cuba – Easter Triduum

11 April 2012

18 April 2012

Letters

1 April 2012 – Message for the Clarian Year, commemorating the consecration and conversion of St Clare of Assisi

VIDEO: Is the Rosary Just “Vain Repetitions”?

We’re coming up on May–a month associated with the Virgin Mary–so here’s a new video on one of the most common objections to the rosary: the charge that it amounts to “vain repetitions,” in violation of Jesus’ command (Matt. 6:7).

By the way, I’m also preparing an “interview” with John Paul II on the rosary, so if you’d like to get his wisdom on this special devotion, sign up for the Secret Information Club and on May 1st you’ll get it by email.

You should sign up for the Secret Information Club using the form on the right (top) or by clicking here to go to SecretInfoClub.com.

The Church Year: Apr. 22, 2012

Today is the 3rd Sunday of Easter. The liturgical color is white.

 

Saints & Celebrations:

On April 22, there is no special fixed liturgical day in the Ordinary Form.

In the Extraordinary Form, we celebrate St.s Soter and Caius, popes and martyrs, who died in A.D. 174 and 296. It is a Class III day.

If you’d like to learn more about St.s Soter and Caius, you can click here.

For information about other saints, blesseds, and feasts celebrated today, you can click here.

 

Readings:

To see today’s readings in the Ordinary Form, you can click here.

Or you can click play to listen to them:

 

Devotional Information:

According to the Holy See’s Directory on Popular Piety:

92. The adaptation or inculturation of a particular pious exercise should not present special difficulties at the level of language, musical and artistic forms, or even of adopting certain gestures. While at one level pious exercises do not concentrate on the essential elements of the sacramental life, at another, it has to be remembered, they are in many cases popular in origin and come directly from the people, and have been formulated in the language of the people, within the framework of the Catholic faith.

The fact that pious exercises and devotions express popular sentiment, does not, however, authorize personalistic or subjective approaches to this material. With due respect for the competence proper to local Ordinaries or the Major Superiors of religious orders in cases involving devotions connected with their Orders, the Conference of Bishops should decide in matters relating to pious exercises widely diffused in a particular country or in a vast region.

Great vigilance and a deep sense of discernment are required to ensure that ideas contrary to the Christian faith, or forms of worship vitiated by syncretism, are not insinuated into pious exercises though various forms of language.

It is especially necessary to ensure that those pious exercises undergoing adaptation or inculturation retain their identity and their essential characteristics. In this regard, particular attention must always be given to their historical origin and to the doctrinal and [ritual] elements by which they are constituted.

With regard to the question of assuming certain elements from popular piety in the process of inculturating the Liturgy, reference should be made to the relative Instruction already published on the subject by this Dicastery.

Longest Reinging King EVER?

Did You Know? Some monarchs reign for a very long time. Where they can ascend to the throne as children (as in ancient Egypt), they can reign even longer. The longest-reigning king in world history is often thought to be the Egyptian Pharaoh Pepi II, who many Egyptologists believe reigned for 94 years (!). He reigned c. 2278-2184 B.C. Since so much depended on the pharaoh, it is thought that his very advanced age toward the end may have contributed to the decline of the Old Kingdom and the chaos that followed. Still, if he lived to his late 90s, at one time he must have been mighty peppy. LEARN MORE.

Sisters in Crisis Special

This week the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith in Rome mandated a thoroughgoing reform of the largest leadership conference for women religious in the United States.

In an exclusive interview, Ann Carey joins Jimmy Akin to go in-depth on this dramatic announcement, why it happened, what it means, and what may happen next.

Ann Carey is a journalist who has been covering the subject of women religious for many years. She is the author of the book Sisters in Crisis: The Tragic Unraveling of Women’s Religious Communities.

According to the Vatican report, there are serious doctrinal problems associated with the activities and publications of the Leadership Conference of Women Religious–some which challenge the core of the Christian faith itself.

The leadership of the LCWR has also flouted the authority of the bishops, as when they publicly sought to neutralize the U.S. bishops’ leadership during the 2010 health care debate in Congress and when they later honored Sr. Carol Keehan, CEO of the Catholic Healthcare Association, which also broke with and defied the bishops over the issue of health care.

You can read more about this subject in an article Jimmy authored, which you can read online here.

How the LCWR will respond to the mandated reform is unknown, but in this interview Ann and Jimmy preview the dramatic developments that may lie ahead of us.

Thank you for letting others know about this program and sharing with friends!

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JIMMY AKIN PODCAST EPISODE 035 (04/21/12)

Today’s Music: Joy Trip (JewelBeat.Com)

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Copyright © 2012 by Jimmy Akin

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The Church Year: Apr. 21, 2012

Today is Saturday of the 2nd week of Easter. The liturgical color is white.

 

Saints & Celebrations:

On April 21, in both the Ordinary and the Extraordinary Form, we celebrate St. Anselm, bishop of Canterbury, and doctor of the Church who died in A.D. 1109. In the Ordinary Form, it is an optional memorial, and in the Extraordinary Form, it is a Class III day.

If you’d like to learn more about St. Anselm, you can click here.

For information about other saints, blesseds, and feasts celebrated today, you can click here.

 

Readings:

To see today’s readings in the Ordinary Form, you can click here.

Or you can click play to listen to them:

 

Devotional Information:

According to the Holy See’s Directory on Popular Piety:

Inculturation and Popular Piety

91. Popular piety is naturally marked by historical and cultural factors. The sheer variety of its expressions is an indicator of that fact. It reflects forms of popular piety that have arisen and been accepted in many particular Churches throughout the ages, and are a sure sign of the extent to which the faith has taken root in the hearts of particular peoples, and of its influence on the daily lives of the faithful. Indeed, “popular piety is the first and most fundamental form of the faith’s “inculturation”, and should be continually guided and oriented by the Liturgy, which, in its turn, nourishes the faith though the heart.” The encounter between the innovative dynamism of the Gospel message, and the various elements of a given culture, is affirmed in popular piety.