Monday, August 31, 2020


The Second Vatican taught, “We do not know the time when earth and humanity will reach their completion, nor do we know the way in which the universe will be transformed.  The world as we see it, disfigured by sin, is passing away. But we are sure that God is preparing a new dwelling place and a new earth.  In this new earth righteousness is to make its home, and happiness will satisfy, and more than satisfy, all the yearnings for peace that arise in human hearts.”  (Gaudium et spes. N. 39)

Our current pandemic lifestyle will not last forever, but more important is how we live our life as a disciple of Jesus Christ, even amid the dislocations caused by COVID 19.  Today take a few minutes to reflect on two blessings:

Irish Blessing

"The test of Gold is Fire
The test of truth is Time
The test of God's love are the heaven's above and everything sublime.
Treasures in life are many,
Dreams realized our few
But I know the test of God's goodness
Is when he gave me a friend like you."

From Circle of Grace

“If you could see the journey whole, you might never undertake it, might never dare the first step that propels you
from the place you have known toward the place you know not.
Call it one of the mercies of the road:
that we see it only by stages as it opens before us,
as it comes into our keeping, step by single step.
There is nothing for it but to go,
and by our going take the vows the pilgrim takes:
to be faithful to the next step; to rely on more than the map;
to heed the signposts of intuition and dream;
to follow the star that only you will recognize;
to keep an open eye for the wonders that attend the path;
to press on beyond distractions, beyond fatigue,
beyond what would tempt you from the way.
There are vows that only you will know:
the secret promises for your particular path and the new ones
you will need to make when the road is revealed
by turns you could not have foreseen.
Keep them, break them, make them again;
each promise becomes part of the path,
each choice creates the road that will take you to the place
where at last you will kneel
to offer the gift most needed—
the gift that only you can give—
before turning to go home by another way.”
God the Father’s most precious gift to us is His Word made flesh, Jesus Christ!  On your journey the Lord walks with you, your job is to reveal His Gospel to those you meet along the way.  Take a few minutes today to reflect on Isaiah 56:7 “My house shall be called a house of prayer for all the nations.”   
[Jan Richardson, from Circle of Grace: A Book of Blessings for the Seasons]


May God Be Praised!


Hear my cry!  “Lord, listen to my prayer: turn your ear to my appeal.” [Psalm 143]   God, You are our refuge and our hope, I turn to you during this COVID 19 Pandemic and plead for Your intercession.  In Your mercy and Your compassion “… grant eternal rest to the dead, comfort to mourners, healing to the sick ….” [Collect from Mass Time in Pandemic]

Provide strength to the first responders, compassion to the medical personnel, and wisdom to government leaders.  End this coronavirus scourge.  Bring Your light to all who wander in the darkness of this pandemic and give us hope in Your eternal love today and every day.  Amen.  [Dcn. George Kelly]











Sunday, August 30, 2020

A Daily Dose of God


As we start the school year (2020-21), we find ourselves in a strange and unique place.  Some schools are virtual, some hybrid and some in the classroom.  Let us pray that soon our students will return to their classrooms to learn with their peers and be led by their teachers.  In the meantime, ask the Lord God to bless students, teachers and parents during this school year.

 

“Lord our God, in your wisdom and love you surround us with the mysteries of the universe.  In times long ago you sent us your prophets to teach your laws and to bear witness to your undying love. You sent us your Son to teach us by Word and example that true wisdom comes from You alone.

 

Send your Spirit upon the students and teachers of our country and our world, fill them with Your wisdom and Your blessings.  Grant that during this academic year they may devote themselves to their studies and to coming to know you better.                                                         

 

May they share what they learn, but most importantly may they share Your love with their families and with each other.  Grant this through Christ our Lord.”

Amen.

 

 

“Those who do not exercise in prayer will make no use of the gifts of the Holy Spirit that God has given to them."  [Dcn. George Kelly]  May your spiritual life be refreshed by your prayer life this year.  I hope that this story about newly weds and their wedding reception will inspire you to find new ways to pray and love God.

 

“Inspiring couple radically change their wedding plans to serve others”

 

The newlyweds donate their food to a shelter and even spend their wedding day serving up the food.  This year has certainly been a challenge for many people: plans and dreams have been put on hold or altered dramatically. And yet with these changes there have been some wonderful stories of people taking their disappointment and turning it into good.

This was recently the case for newlyweds Tyler and Melanie Tapajna from Ohio. The couple had planned to marry in August with 150 guests witnessing their union.  However, with the pandemic they chose a smaller wedding surrounded by their loved ones.  The only dilemma they were then faced with was what to do with all the food they’d ordered for the reception.

The kind-hearted couple decided to donate the food to Laura’s Home, a woman and children’s shelter in Cleveland, Ohio, run by the City Mission.  The bride shared with CNN “we were actually kind of excited I think more about donating the food than being stressed during the wedding.”  And even more impressively, the bride and groom decided to go to the shelter in all their wedding finery to serve up the food to the 135 woman and children themselves.

 

“It was really unbelievable. especially when you think of many of our clients, the women and kids that are in our building, possibly have never been at a wedding like that before,” explained Rich Trickel, the CEO of The City Mission.  While wearing hairnets and masks, the Tapajnas happily served up fried chicken, green beans, salad and mac and cheese to those in need. While it may not have been their dream wedding, it is a wonderful start to married life: being united in serving others.  [Cerith Gardiner, Aleteia.org, Aug 28, 2020]

 

May God Be Praised!

 

Hear my cry!  “Lord, listen to my prayer: turn your ear to my appeal.” [Psalm 143]   God, You are our refuge and our hope, I turn to you during this COVID 19 Pandemic and plead for Your intercession.  In Your mercy and Your compassion “… grant eternal rest to the dead, comfort to mourners, healing to the sick ….” [Collect from Mass Time in Pandemic]

 

Provide strength to the first responders, compassion to the medical personnel, and wisdom to government leaders.  End this coronavirus scourge.  Bring Your light to all who wander in the darkness of this pandemic and give us hope in Your eternal love today and every day.  Amen.  [Dcn. George Kelly]

 

 

 

 





Saturday, August 29, 2020

A Daily Dose of God

A father took his small son with him to town one day to run some errands. When lunchtime arrived, the two of them went to a familiar diner for a sandwich. The father sat down on one of the stools at the counter and lifted the boy up to the seat beside him. They ordered lunch, and when the waiter brought the food, the father said, "Son, we'll just have a silent prayer."

Dad got through praying first and waited for the boy to finish his prayer, but he just sat with his head bowed for an unusually long time. When he finally looked up, his father asked him, "What in the world were you praying about all that time?" With the innocence and honesty of a child, he replied, "How do I know? It was a silent prayer.”           (Adapted from Our Daily Bread)

COVID 19 is still with us and a pall of uncertainty, and apprehension tires to block our Optimism regarding school, society and the restarting of our economic life. 

We wear masks to help stem the spread on the coronavirus, and we pray for the end to the pandemic.  Below are some pandemic cartoons, not to make light of our plight, but to help us remember the pandemic will not last forever and God is with us on our journey. 

During this pandemic we could spend more time focusing on our priorities.  The top priority being allowing God’s grace to mold us, guide us and to sustain us each day. 

May God Be Praised!











Cry out from the depths of your heart to the Lord.  Hear my cry!  “Lord, listen to my prayer: turn your ear to my appeal.” [Psalm 143]   God, You are our refuge and our hope, I turn to you during this COVID 19 Pandemic and plead for Your intercession.  In Your mercy and Your compassion “… grant eternal rest to the dead, comfort to mourners, healing to the sick ….” [Collect from Mass Time in Pandemic]
Provide strength to the first responders, compassion to the medical personnel, and wisdom to government leaders.  End this coronavirus scourge.  Bring Your light to all who wander in the darkness of this pandemic and give us hope in Your eternal love today and every day.  Amen.  [Dcn. George Kelly]








Friday, August 28, 2020

A Daily Dose of God

  

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

St. Augustine said, “You have made us for your self, Lord, and our hearts are restless until they rest in you.” 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 St. Francis de Sales wrote, “I see good in you and am happy for your sake.  I choose and act to make your goodness grow for your sake.”

 

How can we grow in God’s likeness and learn to submit to God’s will?

 

1.    Resolve to cooperate with God’s Will because you are made in God’s image and likeness. 

2.    Obey God’s commandments out of love for Him.

3.    Serve God in the circumstances in which He places you.

4.    Keep a steady course in the pursuit of holiness.

5.    The Divine Will is worthy of our love.

6.    Never cease to aim for perfection

7.    Practice the counsels of poverty, chastity and obedience

8.    Be open to God’s inspirations, if we humbly obey, God will guide us.

 

In conclusion, remember, “The measure of love is to love without measure.”  [St. Francis de Sales]  You cannot love God to much, so love God with all your heart, all your mind and with all your soul.

 

May God Be Praised!

 

 

Cry out from the depths of your heart to the Lord.  Hear my cry!  “Lord, listen to my prayer: turn your ear to my appeal.” [Psalm 143]   God, You are our refuge and our hope, I turn to you during this COVID 19 Pandemic and plead for Your intercession.  In Your mercy and Your compassion “… grant eternal rest to the dead, comfort to mourners, healing to the sick ….” [Collect from Mass Time in Pandemic]

 

Provide strength to the first responders, compassion to the medical personnel, and wisdom to government leaders.  End this coronavirus scourge.  Bring Your light to all who wander in the darkness of this pandemic and give us hope in Your eternal love today and every day.  Amen.  [Dcn. George Kelly]

 

 

 

           

 

 






Thursday, August 27, 2020

A Daily Dose of God

 

Francis Thompson said, “To most, even good people, God is a belief. To the saints God is an embrace.”   Reflect on embracing God because you are called to be a saint.  St. John Paul II taught us, “… that in the Incarnation we see the human face of God and the divine face of humanity.”

 
St. Paul teaches us in Romans “It is now the hour for you to wake from sleep. The night is far spent; the day draws near. Let us cast off deeds of darkness and put on the armor of light. Let us live honorably as in daylight.”  [Romans 13:11b, 12-13a – Morning Prayer I]

 

“My God stands by me, all my trust is in him.  My God stands by me, all my trust is in him.  I find refuge in Him, and I am truly free; all my trust is in Him.  Glory to the Father, and to the Son, and to the Holy Spirit, My God stands by me, all my trust is in Him.”

 

A loving relationship is the communication of feelings, the willed decision to commitment and the openness to the graces that God gives.  Embrace God today, and when tomorrow gets here Embrace God again.

 

May God Be Praised!

 

Cry out from the depths of your heart to the Lord.  Hear my cry!  “Lord, listen to my prayer: turn your ear to my appeal.” [Psalm 143]   God, You are our refuge and our hope, I turn to you during this COVID 19 Pandemic and plead for Your intercession.  In Your mercy and Your compassion “… grant eternal rest to the dead, comfort to mourners, healing to the sick ….” 

[Collect from Mass Time in Pandemic]

 

Provide strength to the first responders, compassion to the medical personnel, and wisdom to government leaders.  End this coronavirus scourge.  Bring Your light to all who wander in the darkness of this pandemic and give us hope in Your eternal love today and every day.  Amen.       

[Dcn. George Kelly]

 

 

 

 

 





Wednesday, August 26, 2020

A Daily Dose of God








 





Some thoughts on trusting and living as a disciple of Jesus Christ every day and every moment.  Brother Lawrence wrote in the Practice in the Presence of God, Do what you do for God.  


St. Francis de Sales recommended that we Live Jesus, by that he meant when we dress put on Jesus, when we wash, wash in Jesus, when we smile, smile Jesus!


Here are two basic prayers offered to us by St. Francis de Sales, the Direction of Intention and My Day is Ending.


Direction of Intention:
“My God, I give you this day.  I offer you, now, all of the good that I shall do …
and I promise to accept, for love of you, all of the difficulty that I shall meet.
Help me to conduct myself during this day In a manner[most] pleasing to you.”

My Day is Ending:
Thank you for all the gifts of this day, for the place I spent it and for those with whom I spent it, for all its joys and all its sorrows, for the troubles overcome and for those that remain.  I offer you the silence of this night, its darkness and its solitude.  Whether you choose under the cover of this night to take away the problems of this day, or leave them for tomorrow, I will bless your name.  Thy will be done. Amen.        

The Celtic Spiritual Tradition of Following Jesus is based on Wisdom, and Wisdom in that Tradition is:
1.         knowledge of self
2.         compassion for others
3.         friendship with God

Friendship with God is grounded in Scripture, the Sacraments and in prayer (in particular, quiet time with the Lord).

If you saw the Movie Field of Dreams, you might remember this line, “If you build it, He will come”, build you house of prayer, listen carefully to this song about prayer: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qt_OkgSOrkU

“Let this be our prayer
When we lose our way
Lead us to a place
Guide us with your grace
To a place where we'll be safe”

May God Be Praised!


Join me and cry out from the depths of your heart to the Lord.  Hear my cry!  “Lord, listen to my prayer: turn your ear to my appeal.” [Psalm 143]   God, You are our refuge and our hope, I turn to you during this COVID 19 Pandemic and plead for Your intercession.  In Your mercy and Your compassion “… grant eternal rest to the dead, comfort to mourners, healing to the sick ….” [Collect from Mass Time in Pandemic]

Provide strength to the first responders, compassion to the medical personnel, and wisdom to government leaders.  End this coronavirus scourge.  Bring Your light to all who wander in the darkness of this pandemic and give us hope in Your eternal love today and every day.  Amen.  [Dcn. George Kelly]










Tuesday, August 25, 2020

A Daily Dose of God

Stephen Covey shared this story in The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People.  One Sunday morning on a subway in New York. People were sitting quietly — some reading newspapers, some lost in thought, some resting with their eyes closed. It was a calm, peaceful scene. Then suddenly, a man and his children entered the subway car. The children were so loud and rambunctious that instantly the whole climate changed.

The man sat down and closed his eyes, apparently oblivious to the situation. The children were yelling back and forth, throwing things, even grabbing people’s papers. It was very disturbing. And yet, the man did nothing.

It was difficult not to feel irritated. I could not believe that he could be so insensitive to let his children run wild like that and do nothing about it, taking no responsibility at all. It was easy to see that everyone else on the subway felt irritated, too. So, someone finally said, “Sir, your children are really disturbing a lot of people, couldn’t control them a little more?

The man lifted his gaze as if to come to a consciousness of the situation for the first time and said softly, “Oh, you’re right. I should do something about it. We just came from the hospital where their mother died about an hour ago. I don’t know what to think, and I guess they don’t know how to handle it either.”

Pope Francis famously said, “Who am I to judge?”, we can learn from the Pope’s humility.  What can we learn?  We can learn the wisdom we were taught as children, “You can’t judge a book by its cover.”  Today judge less and pray for those whom you would judge.

May God Be Praised! 



Join me and cry out from the depths of your heart to the Lord.  Hear my cry!  “Lord, listen to my prayer: turn your ear to my appeal.” [Psalm 143]  God, You are our refuge and our hope, we turn to you during this COVID 19 pandemic and plead for Your intercession.  In Your mercy and Your compassion “… grant eternal rest to the dead, comfort to mourners, healing to the sick ….” [Collect from Mass Time in Pandemic]

Provide strength to the first responders, compassion to the medical personnel, and wisdom to government leaders.  End this coronavirus scourge.  Bring Your light to all who wander in the darkness of this pandemic and give us hope in Your eternal love today and everyday.  Amen.  [Dcn. George Kelly]





Monday, August 24, 2020






St. Francis de Sales wrote, “Do not look forward to the changes and chances of this life with fear; rather look upon them with strong hope that, as they arise, God, whose child you are, will deliver you from them.” 

   

 

St. Paul taught us, “There is but one body and one Spirit, just as there is but one hope given all of you by your call.  There is one Lord, one faith, one baptism; one God and Father of all, who is our all, and works through all, and is in all.”  (St. Paul Letter to the Ephesians 4:3,4)

 
Antiphon - Lord, to whom shall we go? You have the words of eternal life. We believe and we are convinced that you are Christ, the Son of God, alleluia.  (Morning Prayer Week I)

READING - Isaiah 55:1

All you who are thirsty,
   come to the water!
You who have no money,
   come, receive grain and eat;
Come, without paying and without cost,
   drink wine and milk!

RESPONSORY

Lord, listen to my cry; all my trust is in your promise.
– Lord, listen to my cry; all my trust is in your promise.

Dawn finds me watching, crying out for you.
– All my trust is in your promise.

Glory to the Father, and to the Son, and to the Holy Spirit.
– Lord, listen to my cry; all my trust is in your promise.  (Morning Prayer Week IV)



Join me and cry out from the depths of your heart to the Lord who hears us. 

Hear my cry!  “Lord, listen to my prayer: turn your ear to my appeal.” [Psalm 143]
God, You are our refuge and our hope, we turn to you during this COVID 19 pandemic and plead for Your intercession.  In Your mercy and Your compassion “… grant eternal rest to the dead, comfort to mourners, healing to the sick ….” [Collect from Mass Time in Pandemic]

Provide strength to the first responders, compassion to the medical personnel, and wisdom to government leaders.  End this coronavirus scourge.  Bring Your light to all who wander in the darkness of this pandemic and give us hope in Your eternal love today and every day.  Amen.  [Dcn. George Kelly]








Sunday, August 23, 2020

A Daily Dose of God

"For the human heart despite the centuries, has not changed; its' fundamental rhythm is still the heartbeat of God."  Be still and listen to the heartbeat of God.

I want to share this story with you.  When William Dyke was 10 years old, he was blinded in an accident.  Despite his disability he graduated from a university in England with high honors.  While in school he fell in love with the daughter of a high-ranking British Naval Officer and they became engaged.

Shortly before the Wedding William had eye surgery to restore his eyesight [hopefully].  He asked to keep his bandages on until his wedding day; because if the surgery was successful, he wanted the 1st person he wanted to see was his bride-to-be.  As William stood at the foot of the alter with his bride-to-be next to him, the surgeons carefully removed his bandages and William words echoed through the cathedral, “You are more beautiful than I ever imagined!”

When we get to the “land of the living” – we shall be overwhelmed by God’s beauty and exclaim in awe, wonder and reverence: “You are more beautiful than I ever imagined.”  (Bausch, 40 Seasonal Homilies, p.59)

Reflect on God’s beauty sometime today, in the quiet of your heart.  "For the human heart despite the centuries, has not changed; its' fundamental rhythm is still the heartbeat of God."  Be still and listen to the fundamental rhythm heartbeat as you contemplate God’s beauty.

May God Be Praised!

 

Join me and cry out from the depths of your heart to the Lord who hears us. 

Hear my cry!  “Lord, listen to my prayer: turn your ear to my appeal.” [Psalm 143]

God, You are our refuge and our hope, we turn to you during this COVID 19 pandemic and plead for Your intercession.  In Your mercy and Your compassion “… grant eternal rest to the dead, comfort to mourners, healing to the sick ….” [Collect from Mass Time in Pandemic]

Provide strength to the first responders, compassion to the medical personnel, and wisdom to government leaders.  End this coronavirus scourge.  Bring Your light to all who wander in the darkness of this pandemic and give us hope in Your eternal love today and every day.  Amen.  [Dcn. George Kelly]