Blogger Contest!

Urgent plea: Flame of Love of the Immaculate Heart of Mary

Inspirational Scrolls

103+ Free Catholic Books - DVD's

Catholic Directory - RU in it???

Catholic gifts from the Holy Land!

Free Books for Bloggers

Catholic Books $2

Handcrafted Catholic Jewelry & Gifts

Free 66 CD New American Bible Set

Advertise on 1500 Catholic Blogs!

Candlemas — Little Christmas

February 2nd, 2008 by claresiobhan

215px-hans_holbein_d_a_001.jpg

February 2nd–40 days after Christmas–is set aside by the church as the feast of the Presentation. It’s also called Candlemas because historically it was the day for blessing all the candles that were to be used throughout the coming year in the church. You’ll also sometimes see it referred to as Little Christmas.

My pastor says that the Presentation is a “feast of light that occurs in the dark of winter.” Candlemas is a time to reflect on the light of Christ. As a candle burns and gives forth light, it is consumed. It shrinks away to nothing. Christ was consumed as he his light and life for us. We, in imitation of Christ, must also allow ourselves to be consumed in our sacrificial love of God and neighbor.

Links

Catholic Encyclopedia entry:
http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/03245b.htm

Wikipedia article:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Candlemas

Posted in Catholic Church, Christmas, Feast Days, Liturgy, Prayer/Spirituality | No Comments »

How to Clean Up After Your New Year’s Eve Party

January 1st, 2008 by claresiobhan

winter-berries.JPG

HOW TO CLEAN UP AFTER YOUR NEW YEAR’S EVE PARTY

Begin by recalling the words of one of your friends, who offered the blessing before the meal last night at the party: “As we begin another new year, let us put our hands to the plow and not look back.”

Put your hand to the plow first by going around the house sprinkling all the rooms with holy water, saying, “Lord, bless this mess.”

Let the dogs up from the basement to snarf up the crumbs and other edible detritus. Be thankful for every child who snuck food into the various forbidden zones and spilled something. Gratefully pick up left-behind socks and sweatshirts. Thank God for the joy and energy these children – yours and your friends’ – bring daily into your home and into your life.

Take the crockpot of leftover chili out of the fridge and put it on low to heat up for dinner. Thank God for your Mom, who loaned you the crockpot for the party. Remember the countless other favors, little and huge, that your Mom has done for you since before you were born. Be thankful that she’s still in good health, able to work and care for herself and her home, and able to enjoy her grandchildren.

Load the dishwasher and say a prayer for every party guest who dutifully inscribed his or her name on a plastic cup with a permanent marker. Think about how you’ve known some of these people since you were all teenagers, how you’ve seen each other court beloveds and get married, buy first homes, give birth to children, bury moms and dads, agonize over tough decisions, develop gray hair, but most of all grow in love for Jesus. Thank God for giving you and your children a close-knit community of faith. Pray that all of the people in your life – your children, your Mom, your best friends and their families — will be around for the next party and be able to use their cups again.

Find the church bulletin under a couch cushion and thank God for your parish priests, how they live their entire lives so that you, your children and several hundred other people just like you will have the presence of Jesus in their lives, in word and in sacrament. Imagine that even though it must be a joy to serve God in that way, the trials must also be numerous. Resolve to pray for them more and make even more effort to tell them how much your appreciate them.

Wipe the counters and throw away trash. Put the Advent wreath back in its place at the center of the kitchen table. As you light the white tapers, blessed at church on Candlemas Day last year and put in on Christmas Day to replace the purple and pink candles, thank God for the Catholic Church and for the holy season of Christmas, the blessings of which extend into the new year rather than ending with an anti-climactic and almost audible thud on December 26th, the way it does out there in the world.

Now that the house is tidied up, brew a cup of tea and sit down. Thank God for everything that transpired in the past year: the joys and the sufferings, the lessons learned, the countless opportunities to grow in holiness, even the ones you missed. Remember the events of the past and what they taught you, but don’t dwell on them, neither on your failures nor on your successes. Give everything to God.

Put your hands to the plow. Fix your eyes on the Morning Star and plow ahead, never looking back. (Copyright 2008 by Clare Siobhan. Originally published, in slightly altered form, in the National Catholic Register, Dec. 24-Jan. 6, 2006, under the title “New Again”. Subscribers can read the original article at this link: http://ncregister.com/site/article/1648)

bench-in-winter.JPG

Posted in Article reprints, Catholic Church, Christmas, Feast Days, Prayer/Spirituality | No Comments »

Christmas carols for people who go a bit loopy at this time of year…

December 26th, 2007 by claresiobhan

No idea who wrote these, but they’ve been floating around the internet and have made it to my email inbox a couple times. Enjoy!

CHRISTMAS DISORDERS and CAROLS
1. Schizophrenia — Do You Hear What I Hear?

2. Multiple Personality Disorder — We Three Kings Disoriented Are

3. Dementia — I Think I’ll be Home for Christmas

4. Narcissistic — Hark the Herald Angels Sing About Me

5. Manic — Deck the Halls and Walls and House and Lawn and Streets and Stores and Office and Town and Cars and Buses and Trucks and Trees and…..

6. Paranoid — Santa Claus is Coming to Get Me

7. Borderline Personality Disorder — Thoughts of Roasting on an Open Fire

8. Personality Disorder — You Better Watch Out, I’m Gonna Cry, I’m Gonna Pout, Maybe I’ll Tell You Why

9. Attention Deficit Disorder — Silent night, Holy oooh look at the Froggy – can I have a chocolate, why is France so far away?

10. Obsessive Compulsive Disorder — Jingle Bells, Jingle Bells, Jingle Bells, Jingle Bells, Jingle Bells, Jingle Bells, Jingle Bells, Jingle Bells, Jingle Bells, Jingle Bells, Jingle Bells, Jingle Bells, Jingle Bells, Jingle Bells, Jingle Bells….

11. Oppositional Defiant Disorder– You better not cry – Oh yes I will
You better not Shout – I can if i want to
You better not pout – Can if i want to
I’m telling you why – Not listening
Santa Claus is coming to town – No he’s not!!

Posted in Christmas, Humor | No Comments »

It’s Christmas Day, but remember…

December 25th, 2007 by claresiobhan

…it’s always Advent!

Merry Christmas! May the Lord Jesus be born anew in your hearts as you continue to wait in joyful hope for his second coming.

nativity-resized.jpg

Posted in Advent, Christmas, Prayer/Spirituality | No Comments »

Christmas Eve reflection

December 24th, 2007 by claresiobhan

This is from Terry Nelson at Abbey Roads 2:

Keep your eyes fixed on Jesus.

It is good to try to keep Jesus as our companion in the days approaching Christmas, especially if the holidays tend to depress us. Privately, we do not have to “pretend” he is going to be re-born on Christmas eve, engaging our imaginations in an artificial waiting game, pretending he will suddenly appear like Santa Claus, and take all of our troubles away. Not at all, Emmanuel means Christ is with us now.

Christ is present with us now – the Eternal Now. We can sit silently with him now; in the Blessed Sacrament, or simply while gazing upon an image of him. If one can not find solace in and through the liturgy of Advent and Christmas, these personal intimate encounters help a great deal. Silence is a teacher, Jesus is the text book. His poverty and helplessness reflect our own poverty – even our inability to manage our emotions, our health, our finances, sometimes our very lives. His poverty and humiliation not only mirrors, but embraces our misery. He is Emmanuel – God with us – both in our sorrows and our joys – right now.

Terry blogs at http://terry58.stblogs.com/

Posted in Advent, Catholic Church, Christmas, Prayer/Spirituality, Quotes | No Comments »