Sisterjanessa's Blog


Magical Mystery Tour Commences
February 8, 2010, 1:42 am
Filed under: religious/spiritual | Tags: ,

MAGICAL MYSTERY TOUR BLOG ENTRY #1
Live…from the Gordon Road Kingdom Hall of Jehovah’s Witnesses…Sunday, Feb. 7, 2010

…people here are exceptionally friendly…a woman, then a young man welcome us, shake our hands, introduce themselves…the young man is a student and has a buddy from China. They’re teaching each other their native languages. Very nice-sounding young men. Then another lady with a hat greets us, then a red-haired woman, wife of one of the presenters, it turns out.

At 10a.m. the meeting begins with a “brother” who is a speaker from another JW congregation.  (I say meeting because it does look more like a meeting room in a school or college, or perhaps a small insurance business, than any type of worship area.

The speaker is exceptional, and lucid, and his points are meaningful-at least to me. A short prayer and a hymn from their new hymnal precedes the speaker’s time.  His emphasis is on Titus, chapter 2; the admonishment to reject the MTV-gen’s immorality. Christians are to be sober-minded, steady, and act according to the standards of Jehovah. (They seem to use the name Jehovah for God). He went on to mention the qualifications of elders (like Bishops), proper training-up of children, proper dressing and grooming, and self-control for youth.

The “Watchtower Study” began at 10:40a.m. The husband of  the red-haired woman facilitated and asked questions, a young man to the side read the lesson from a different mic, and a roving mic was provided for congregants’ answers to the questions.  Two paragraphs are read at a time. It’s a lesson about how to make your spiritual progress evident to others. I’m not certain about the implications in this lesson; (we don’t want to become proud, egotistical, or braggarts about our growth in the Lord.) The lesson actually does not tackle this question. Instead we learn how to have right speech, right conduct, right personal habits, chasteness, love for others, fidelity to our faith, obedience, and to find joy as fruit of the Holy Spirit, all through the life of Timothy, Paul’s ministry companion (stuff any good Buddhist would approve of).  It is a terrific lesson, fraught with good things, and every answer provided by the eager audience members only reinforces what we’ve just read. The constant reviewing can be redundant but is powerful. I take notes.

At noon,  another hymn was sung and a dismissal prayer said. Red-hair offered  us a ride home and took us on a short tour of the building and gave us contact numbers for her and hubbie.

Some hitherto unknown phrases caught my ear during the 2 hours of study. Some of these phrases were:
“in this time of the end.”
“as Satan’s system continues.”
“Theocratic Ministry School”

“Group Overseers”
“…to endure the remainder of this wicked system.”

I also understood them to imply that only men could be Elders.

All in all, it was an excellent experience, speaking for myself. From past home visits from JWs, I know that they believe some doctrines that are a bit off the beaten orthodox path. But I know some churches which could learn some very good behaviors from this group of Jehovah’s Witnesses.



My version-the state of the union
November 3, 2009, 10:10 pm
Filed under: culture | Tags: , , , , , , , ,

I know the state of the Union here in the good ol’ U.S. of A. It’s one where nobody knows anything and nobody cares.  You might tolerate a state like that in-say, a paint store or a convenience store. But the new total bottom line theocracy in the U.S. businessman’s mind predominates even into the physician’s office, one of the places you always thought you could rely on for “care”.

I’m not sure when the kick-off began, but since the 90s, the slogans for business cry “cut all expenses to the very bone!”. Reduce quality to the very lowest you can possibly get away with…charge the highest price any jerk is stupid enough or desperate enough to pay…and for god’s sake, get rid of all employees you possibly can. Employees are expensive; knowledgeable employees even more expensive. Replace them with computers, make the rest work three jobs, and hire minimum wage monkeys for everything else you need.

Wages cost too much in America so now all employees are gotten from undeveloped  countries where the wages run $.60-1.50 a day. Import crap from slave factories and crap-making countries so you can “sell for less” than any American craftsman or American factory  can. Who cares if customers can’t understand your foreign employees? Who cares if the toys are dangerous? Who cares if the American economy goes under? As long as my mega-monopoly does well, and my profit margin stays at 800% or more.

If you think for a minute about this state of affairs, you will see that these unethical, unsocial, immoral business  practices will create an American wasteland and an oligarchy which, in the future-maybe even now- will not be able to be challenged or taken down.

I just pray I will not live to become Chinese, not that there is anything wrong with Chinese people; it is their government I abhor, and I don’t wish to live under it anymore than I would voluntarily move to Moscow or Iraq, with current conditions the way they are. That is why I point out these things here and now, because I would prefer that the U.S.A. avoid such a wretched, unjust future of rule by the exclusively rich, the communist, the dictator. Preservation of freedoms that America has known since its independence must begin now and we citizens (the government can’t do it because they are part of the rich & the powerful) must work to divert a runaway capitalism and replace it with a more moderate and regulated system where fair play, equal entrepreneurial opportunities, and justice are applied with equanimity and with ethical  systems of responsibility and accountability. Then, we can move back to a state where quality, good service, and people are much more important than the total bottom line.

Suggestions for Citizens Who Care:

!!!stop buying from publicly traded companies- no matter how persuasive their ads sound!!! (they are screwing us the whole way to the bank) !!!

There are agencies in this country who make billions of dollars per year by sitting around thinking up psychological and manipulative tricks to put in advertising to make people buy things that are bad for us, that we don’t need!

OK-they’ve downsized, laid off, and replaced employees with insane computers few can operate (can we lynch the guy who developed the computer telephone answering system?). The employees who are left have to do the work previously done by all who were laid off. They’ve outsourced the  factory work, they’ve reduced full-time people to part-time (cheaper for them) and they don’t mind at all selling us tainted and toxic food, dangerous medications, and other defective plastic items that break with normal usage, for the same price  we used to pay for better products years ago. How long will we stand for this????!!!!!!!!!

The expected life span of a laptop computer is currently 2 years. (@$800-1200)???????????

Large purchases for a middle class 1950s home/lifestyle:

refrigerator

stove with oven

1TV (color if you were fortunate) (shared)

1car (shared)

1 telephone (shared)

washing machine & electric dryer

hot water heater

furnace


Large purchases for year 2009 family:

refrigerator

stove and oven

microwave

large screen TV (family room)

additional TVs (each bedroom and possibly other rooms)

DVD players (one for each TV)

cable boxes/dvr/Tivo/satellite boxes (1 for each TV)

VHS player (1 or 2)

Digital cameras (1 or 2)

Digital camcorder

Desktop family computer, complete outfit

laptop computers for each child w/ accessories

laptop business computer for dad w/ accessories

MP3 players for each child

sound system connected to 1 computer

surround sound system in family room

cell phones for each member of the family

automobiles for each driving member of family

adjunct transports such as additional van/pickup

Heat pump/HVAC whole house system

hot water heater

1 jacuzzi tub………………………..

Even if prices had remained constant from 1950 to 2009, it is still obvious that the cost of keeping up with technology has caused our current cost of living to skyrocket. Add to that inflationary prices, additional high-priced insurance, and college and job expenses, and we can see why we’re struggling today with economics.

According to a blurb I just read in a magazine, 4 men control all the media in the U.S.!






The New-Old Nasty is Consuming the World
October 29, 2009, 4:02 pm
Filed under: culture | Tags: , , , , , , , ,

Capitalism started out as a great and promising economic system, lifting many out of serfdom and peasantry, creating a middle class, and allowing millions to use hard work and creativity to reach for their dreams. But as capitalism stands now in the America of 2009, it is like a hideous monster plague which, due to completely unregulated greed, has infected every industry with a vile, stinking  filth. In nearly every commercial venue, the wolves, hungrier than they’ve ever been, are in charge of the henhouse.

The Machiavellian-like elite, once having a taste of super-richdom will never turn back to embrace moderation. It is part of man’s nature to want ever more and more of anything he has. Money and power are at the top of this list and it is true that money is a great mover and motivator of advances, innovation, and creativity. But if this steam roller is not guided by morality, regulated by just laws, and tempered according to the greater good, it will engulf everything in its path and rape the landscape and the people of all they have.  If the media and other reports I’ve read  and considered are anywhere near correct, it is greed which brought on the Iraq war, that keeps gas prices going up, that drove the economy into recession-again-and which has ruined our food supply, is gobbling up the rain forest (the lungs of  our planet), and  causing an epidemic of chronic disease, obesity, and illness in this country.  And worse, most  of the world is chafing at the bit to follow in our ruinous footsteps.

An insightful area physician wrote in a letter to the editor of our local paper (owned by the New York Times) last week that any national health care program would have to have a non-profit basis and I heartily concur. A healthcare system that must be profit-making for its greedy “nobles” is doomed to failure. Only a strictly non-profit-based private company which would receive multiple sources of funding  might have a chance to work, and that is if all the medical professionals-from top physicians to bedpan makers were also non-profits. In fact, if every industry in America was mandated to be non-profit-making, including and especially law-makers, this would not be too radical.

It is a fact that all of the media in this country is owned by 4 or 5 men. Teddy Roosevelt worked hard during his Presidency to battle the monopolies of his time and to give fair chances at competition for an enormous number of middle class entrepreneurs. The small businessman simply can’t compete on any terms with mega-monopolies like Chase or Time Warner or AT&T. Again the Bush men are responsible for winking (and no doubt profiting) from these super-rich overlords who have a stranglehold on all the markets of most of the world in everything from sodas to phones.  (We have to remember that those who end up buying government offices went to prep school and college  with those who end up running sweatshops all over the world and making billions per year in profits.

As a more moderate solution, laws must effectively address and curb runaway corruption. As examples, Senior staff and CEOs should not be allowed to earn, in any form, more than 4 or 5 times more than the lowest paid employee at the company.  Prices for life-necessities should have categories of ceilings according to quality. A tighter lid needs to be kept on inflation.  Agricultural products should not be allowed to be degraded, re-engineered, or tainted with poisons so that huge conglomerate farms can make higher profits.  The FDA has no business approving and allowing the scandalous drug and food practices it has made standard operating procedure in this nation. [Incidentally, manufacturers, Big Agriculture, the oil companies, and the automakers in the U.S. , to mention a few, are fighting against laws that would address the global warming problem, according to “Mother Jones” mag, Nov-Dec 2009]. Lawmakers should have never been allowed  professional status as full-time high-paid executives who pass laws according to the highest bidder or due to pressures from lobbyists or political backers. The Bush men removed safeguards from the Stock Exchange and Banking System so they could reap mega-profits. This is what caused the Depression of 1929 and our current recession. Banking systems must be regulated by sensible rules and the Stock Exchange must be likewise restored to sane practices. Unlimited speculations in “futures” must be seriously curbed. The simple fact is that the cause of all of these maladies is the same: GREED

Sometimes as I’m reading the news, I feel as though I’m visiting a story about the corrupt Senate of ancient Rome, or the cunning  of a Cromwell or Henry VIII; certainly not America, the land of the free and the brave. But we are free no longer. We have been bound and enslaved by our worst enemy: the Antichrist, Greed.

Rev. Sr. Janessa Howard



Writings from Pope are Wonderful!

I happened to read a summary article about the latest official writings (called an encyclical) from Pope Benedict XVI this year in “America” mag. I really loved what was being said-in effect that everyone (all humans on the planet) are called by God to moral accountability in their actions and deeds and intentions. In the wake of the “free” 60s and 70s, I feel that the ideas of responsibility and especially accountability for what we do has been so diluted that many completely disregard ethics and morals in their seeking of what they want for themselves. The idea of doing what is the best for the common good of all has been left behind and replaced with I can do whatever I can get away with!

I am placing here the introduction to the Pope’s Encyclical and also the summary. (The 5 or 6 chapters in between are just too much for most people to sit down and read, myself included). [Sections accentuated in orange are my way of calling attention to those passages.]

ENCYCLICAL LETTER
CARITAS IN VERITATE
OF THE SUPREME PONTIFF
BENEDICT XVI
TO THE BISHOPS
PRIESTS AND DEACONS
MEN AND WOMEN RELIGIOUS
THE LAY FAITHFUL
AND ALL PEOPLE OF GOOD WILL
ON INTEGRAL HUMAN DEVELOPMENT
IN CHARITY AND TRUTH

INTRODUCTION
1. Charity in truth, to which Jesus Christ bore witness by his earthly life and especially by his death and resurrection, is the principal driving force behind the authentic development of every person and of all humanity. Love — caritas — is an extraordinary force which leads people to opt for courageous and generous engagement in the field of justice and peace. It is a force that has its origin in God, Eternal Love and Absolute Truth. Each person finds his good by adherence to God’s plan for him, in order to realize it fully: in this plan, he finds his truth, and through adherence to this truth he becomes free (cf. Jn 8:32). To defend the truth, to articulate it with humility and conviction, and to bear witness to it in life are therefore exacting and indispensable forms of charity. Charity, in fact, “rejoices in the truth” (1 Cor 13:6). All people feel the interior impulse to love authentically: love and truth never abandon them completely, because these are the vocation planted by God in the heart and mind of every human person. The search for love and truth is purified and liberated by Jesus Christ from the impoverishment that our humanity brings to it, and he reveals to us in all its fullness the initiative of love and the plan for true life that God has prepared for us. In Christ, charity in truth becomes the Face of his Person, a vocation for us to love our brothers and sisters in the truth of his plan. Indeed, he himself is the Truth (cf. Jn 14:6).
2. Charity[ love] is at the heart of the Church’s social doctrine. Every responsibility and every commitment spelt out by that doctrine is derived from charity which, according to the teaching of Jesus, is the synthesis of the entire Law (cf. Mt 22:36- 40). It gives real substance to the personal relationship with God and with neighbour; it is the principle not only of micro-relationships (with friends, with family members or within small groups) but also of macro-relationships (social, economic and political ones). For the Church, instructed by the Gospel, charity is everything because, as Saint John teaches (cf. 1 Jn 4:8, 16) and as I recalled in my first Encyclical Letter, “God is love” (Deus Caritas Est): everything has its origin in God’s love, everything is shaped by it, everything is directed towards it. Love is God’s greatest gift to humanity, it is his promise and our hope.
I am aware of the ways in which charity has been and continues to be misconstrued and emptied of meaning, with the consequent risk of being misinterpreted, detached from ethical living and, in any event, undervalued. In the social, juridical, cultural, political and economic fields — the contexts, in other words, that are most exposed to this danger — it is easily dismissed as irrelevant for interpreting and giving direction to moral responsibility. Hence the need to link charity with truth not only in the sequence, pointed out by Saint Paul, of veritas in caritate (Eph 4:15), but also in the inverse and complementary sequence of caritas in veritate. Truth needs to be sought, found and expressed within the “economy” of charity, but charity in its turn needs to be understood, confirmed and practised in the light of truth. In this way, not only do we do a service to charity enlightened by truth, but we also help give credibility to truth, demonstrating its persuasive and authenticating power in the practical setting of social living. This is a matter of no small account today, in a social and cultural context which relativizes truth, often paying little heed to it and showing increasing reluctance to acknowledge its existence.
3. Through this close link with truth, charity can be recognized as an authentic expression of humanity and as an element of fundamental importance in human relations, including those of a public nature. Only in truth does charity shine forth, only in truth can charity be authentically lived. Truth is the light that gives meaning and value to charity. That light is both the light of reason and the light of faith, through which the intellect attains to the natural and supernatural truth of charity: it grasps its meaning as gift, acceptance, and communion. Without truth, charity degenerates into sentimentality. Love becomes an empty shell, to be filled in an arbitrary way. In a culture without truth, this is the fatal risk facing love. It falls prey to contingent subjective emotions and opinions, the word “love” is abused and distorted, to the point where it comes to mean the opposite. Truth frees charity from the constraints of an emotionalism that deprives it of relational and social content, and of a fideism that deprives it of human and universal breathing-space. In the truth, charity reflects the personal yet public dimension of faith in the God of the Bible, who is both Agápe and Lógos: Charity and Truth, Love and Word.
4. Because it is filled with truth, charity can be understood in the abundance of its values, it can be shared and communicated. Truth, in fact, is lógos which creates diá-logos, and hence communication and communion. Truth, by enabling men and women to let go of their subjective opinions and impressions, allows them to move beyond cultural and historical limitations and to come together in the assessment of the value and substance of things. Truth opens and unites our minds in the lógos of love: this is the Christian proclamation and testimony of charity. In the present social and cultural context, where there is a widespread tendency to relativize truth, practising charity in truth helps people to understand that adhering to the values of Christianity is not merely useful but essential for building a good society and for true integral human development. A Christianity of charity without truth would be more or less interchangeable with a pool of good sentiments, helpful for social cohesion, but of little relevance. In other words, there would no longer be any real place for God in the world. Without truth, charity is confined to a narrow field devoid of relations. It is excluded from the plans and processes of promoting human development of universal range, in dialogue between knowledge and praxis.
5. Charity is love received and given. It is “grace” (cháris). Its source is the wellspring of the Father’s love for the Son, in the Holy Spirit. Love comes down to us from the Son. It is creative love, through which we have our being; it is redemptive love, through which we are recreated. Love is revealed and made present by Christ (cf. Jn 13:1) and “poured into our hearts through the Holy Spirit” (Rom 5:5). As the objects of God’s love, men and women become subjects of charity, they are called to make themselves instruments of grace, so as to pour forth God’s charity and to weave networks of charity.
This dynamic of charity received and given is what gives rise to the Church’s social teaching, which is caritas in veritate in re sociali: the proclamation of the truth of Christ’s love in society. This doctrine is a service to charity, but its locus is truth. Truth preserves and expresses charity’s power to liberate in the ever-changing events of history. It is at the same time the truth of faith and of reason, both in the distinction and also in the convergence of those two cognitive fields. Development, social well-being, the search for a satisfactory solution to the grave socio-economic problems besetting humanity, all need this truth. What they need even more is that this truth should be loved and demonstrated. Without truth, without trust and love for what is true, there is no social conscience and responsibility, and social action ends up serving private interests and the logic of power, resulting in social fragmentation, especially in a globalized society at difficult times like the present.
6. “Caritas in veritate” is the principle around which the Church’s social doctrine turns, a principle that takes on practical form in the criteria that govern moral action. I would like to consider two of these in particular, of special relevance to the commitment to development in an increasingly globalized society: justice and the common good.
First of all, justice. Ubi societas, ibi ius: every society draws up its own system of justice. Charity goes beyond justice, because to love is to give, to offer what is “mine” to the other; but it never lacks justice, which prompts us to give the other what is “his”, what is due to him by reason of his being or his acting. I cannot “give” what is mine to the other, without first giving him what pertains to him in justice. If we love others with charity, then first of all we are just towards them. Not only is justice not extraneous to charity, not only is it not an alternative or parallel path to charity: justice is inseparable from charity[1], and intrinsic to it. Justice is the primary way of charity or, in Paul VI’s words, “the minimum measure” of it[2], an integral part of the love “in deed and in truth” (1 Jn 3:18), to which Saint John exhorts us. On the one hand, charity demands justice: recognition and respect for the legitimate rights of individuals and peoples. It strives to build the earthly city according to law and justice. On the other hand, charity transcends justice and completes it in the logic of giving and forgiving[3]. The earthly city is promoted not merely by relationships of rights and duties, but to an even greater and more fundamental extent by relationships of gratuitousness, mercy and communion. Charity always manifests God’s love in human relationships as well, it gives theological and salvific value to all commitment for justice in the world.
7. Another important consideration is the common good. To love someone is to desire that person’s good and to take effective steps to secure it. Besides the good of the individual, there is a good that is linked to living in society: the common good. It is the good of “all of us”, made up of individuals, families and intermediate groups who together constitute society[4]. It is a good that is sought not for its own sake, but for the people who belong to the social community and who can only really and effectively pursue their good within it. To desire the common good and strive towards it is a requirement of justice and charity. To take a stand for the common good is on the one hand to be solicitous for, and on the other hand to avail oneself of, that complex of institutions that give structure to the life of society, juridically, civilly, politically and culturally, making it the pólis, or “city”. The more we strive to secure a common good corresponding to the real needs of our neighbours, the more effectively we love them. Every Christian is called to practise this charity, in a manner corresponding to his vocation and according to the degree of influence he wields in the pólis. This is the institutional path — we might also call it the political path — of charity, no less excellent and effective than the kind of charity which encounters the neighbour directly, outside the institutional mediation of the pólis. When animated by charity, commitment to the common good has greater worth than a merely secular and political stand would have. Like all commitment to justice, it has a place within the testimony of divine charity that paves the way for eternity through temporal action. Man’s earthly activity, when inspired and sustained by charity, contributes to the building of the universal city of God, which is the goal of the history of the human family. In an increasingly globalized society, the common good and the effort to obtain it cannot fail to assume the dimensions of the whole human family, that is to say, the community of peoples and nations[5], in such a way as to shape the earthly city in unity and peace, rendering it to some degree an anticipation and a prefiguration of the undivided city of God.
8. In 1967, when he issued the Encyclical Populorum Progressio, my venerable predecessor Pope Paul VI illuminated the great theme of the development of peoples with the splendour of truth and the gentle light of Christ’s charity. He taught that life in Christ is the first and principal factor of development[6] and he entrusted us with the task of travelling the path of development with all our heart and all our intelligence[7], that is to say with the ardour of charity and the wisdom of truth. It is the primordial truth of God’s love, grace bestowed upon us, that opens our lives to gift and makes it possible to hope for a “development of the whole man and of all men”[8], to hope for progress “from less human conditions to those which are more human”[9], obtained by overcoming the difficulties that are inevitably encountered along the way.
At a distance of over forty years from the Encyclical’s publication, I intend to pay tribute and to honour the memory of the great Pope Paul VI, revisiting his teachings on integral human development and taking my place within the path that they marked out, so as to apply them to the present moment. This continual application to contemporary circumstances began with the Encyclical Sollicitudo Rei Socialis, with which the Servant of God Pope John Paul II chose to mark the twentieth anniversary of the publication of Populorum Progressio. Until that time, only Rerum Novarum had been commemorated in this way. Now that a further twenty years have passed, I express my conviction that Populorum Progressio deserves to be considered “the Rerum Novarum of the present age”, shedding light upon humanity’s journey towards unity.
9. Love in truth — caritas in veritate — is a great challenge for the Church in a world that is becoming progressively and pervasively globalized. The risk for our time is that the de facto interdependence of people and nations is not matched by ethical interaction of consciences and minds that would give rise to truly human development. Only in charity, illumined by the light of reason and faith, is it possible to pursue development goals that possess a more humane and humanizing value. The sharing of goods and resources, from which authentic development proceeds, is not guaranteed by merely technical progress and relationships of utility, but by the potential of love that overcomes evil with good (cf. Rom 12:21), opening up the path towards reciprocity of consciences and liberties.
The Church does not have technical solutions to offer[10] and does not claim “to interfere in any way in the politics of States.”[11] She does, however, have a mission of truth to accomplish, in every time and circumstance, for a society that is attuned to man, to his dignity, to his vocation. Without truth, it is easy to fall into an empiricist and sceptical view of life, incapable of rising to the level of praxis because of a lack of interest in grasping the values — sometimes even the meanings — with which to judge and direct it. Fidelity to man requires fidelity to the truth, which alone is the guarantee of freedom (cf. Jn 8:32) and of the possibility of integral human development. For this reason the Church searches for truth, proclaims it tirelessly and recognizes it wherever it is manifested. This mission of truth is something that the Church can never renounce. Her social doctrine is a particular dimension of this proclamation: it is a service to the truth which sets us free. Open to the truth, from whichever branch of knowledge it comes, the Church’s social doctrine receives it, assembles into a unity the fragments in which it is often found, and mediates it within the constantly changing life-patterns of the society of peoples and nations[12].

CONCLUSION

78. Without God man neither knows which way to go, nor even understands who he is. In the face of the enormous problems surrounding the development of peoples, which almost make us yield to discouragement, we find solace in the sayings of our Lord Jesus Christ, who teaches us: “Apart from me you can do nothing” (Jn 15:5) and then encourages us: “I am with you always, to the close of the age” (Mt 28:20). As we contemplate the vast amount of work to be done, we are sustained by our faith that God is present alongside those who come together in his name to work for justice. Paul VI recalled in Populorum Progressio that man cannot bring about his own progress unaided, because by himself he cannot establish an authentic humanism. Only if we are aware of our calling, as individuals and as a community, to be part of God’s family as his sons and daughters, will we be able to generate a new vision and muster new energy in the service of a truly integral humanism. The greatest service to development, then, is a Christian humanism[157] that enkindles charity and takes its lead from truth, accepting both as a lasting gift from God. Openness to God makes us open towards our brothers and sisters and towards an understanding of life as a joyful task to be accomplished in a spirit of solidarity. On the other hand, ideological rejection of God and an atheism of indifference, oblivious to the Creator and at risk of becoming equally oblivious to human values, constitute some of the chief obstacles to development today. A humanism which excludes God is an inhuman humanism. Only a humanism open to the Absolute can guide us in the promotion and building of forms of social and civic life — structures, institutions, culture and ethos — without exposing us to the risk of becoming ensnared by the fashions of the moment. Awareness of God’s undying love sustains us in our laborious and stimulating work for justice and the development of peoples, amid successes and failures, in the ceaseless pursuit of a just ordering of human affairs. God’s love calls us to move beyond the limited and the ephemeral, it gives us the courage to continue seeking and working for the benefit of all, even if this cannot be achieved immediately and if what we are able to achieve, alongside political authorities and those working in the field of economics, is always less than we might wish[158]. God gives us the strength to fight and to suffer for love of the common good, because he is our All, our greatest hope.
79. Development needs Christians with their arms raised towards God in prayer, Christians moved by the knowledge that truth-filled love, caritas in veritate, from which authentic development proceeds, is not produced by us, but given to us. For this reason, even in the most difficult and complex times, besides recognizing what is happening, we must above all else turn to God’s love. Development requires attention to the spiritual life, a serious consideration of the experiences of trust in God, spiritual fellowship in Christ, reliance upon God’s providence and mercy, love and forgiveness, self-denial, acceptance of others, justice and peace. All this is essential if “hearts of stone” are to be transformed into “hearts of flesh” (Ezek 36:26), rendering life on earth “divine” and thus more worthy of humanity. All this is of man, because man is the subject of his own existence; and at the same time it is of God, because God is at the beginning and end of all that is good, all that leads to salvation: “the world or life or death or the present or the future, all are yours; and you are Christ’s; and Christ is God’s” (1 Cor 3:22-23). Christians long for the entire human family to call upon God as “Our Father!” In union with the only-begotten Son, may all people learn to pray to the Father and to ask him, in the words that Jesus himself taught us, for the grace to glorify him by living according to his will, to receive the daily bread that we need, to be understanding and generous towards our debtors, not to be tempted beyond our limits, and to be delivered from evil (cf. Mt 6:9-13).
At the conclusion of the Pauline Year, I gladly express this hope in the Apostle’s own words, taken from the Letter to the Romans: “Let love be genuine; hate what is evil, hold fast to what is good; love one another with brotherly affection; outdo one another in showing honour” (Rom 12:9-10). May the Virgin Mary — proclaimed Mater Ecclesiae by Paul VI and honoured by Christians as Speculum Iustitiae and Regina Pacis — protect us and obtain for us, through her heavenly intercession, the strength, hope and joy necessary to continue to dedicate ourselves with generosity to the task of bringing about the “development of the whole man and of all men”[159].
Given in Rome, at Saint Peter’s, on 29 June, the Solemnity of the Holy Apostles Peter and Paul, in the year 2009, the fifth of my Pontificate.
BENEDICTUS PP. XVI



New Old Tridentine Mass experience
October 29, 2009, 2:54 pm
Filed under: religious/spiritual | Tags: , , ,

I recently joined the Catholic Answers Forum which I like very much. I have learned so much from the writers there and the forums are full of interesting and good people. I recently posted on the forum about my first experience at a Latin Mass:

The new old Tridentine Mass
http://forums.catholic.com/showthread.php?p=5870891#post5870891
Posted by: janessa1850
On: Oct 27, ‘09 4:31 pm

I have just been to my first experience at a Tridentine Mass. Having only known the Novus Ordo (I converted to RC in 1988), I wondered about the old mass and heard so many who said they missed it, how beautiful it was, etc.  Let me just say it was such a powerful experience. I developed the belief over the years that the Tridentine Mass was a perfect backdrop for inner meditation. (This idea came from an old prayer book.)  We are actually supposed to be deeply meditating during the chanting and the prayers and the inaudable parts. (Unless you are occupied doing so, the Latin Mass can be totally boring to people.)  The Tridentine Mass caused me to become very meditative. I was very inwardly busy instead of outwardly busy, as one is at the Novus Ordo. But the Latin Mass was more meaningful because I was in meditation. At the new mass there are so many distractions. Also the beautiful language (English) was so inspiring. Why would anyone want to remove such beautiful wordings from the liturgy???? I also believe that the Church should absolutely keep the Latin language as a unifying force, and that all Catholics be taught some Latin.:thumbsup:
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ANSWER AND COMMENT BY “saskatoon”:
Re: The new old Tridentine Mass
http://forums.catholic.com/showthread.php?p=5871153#post5871153
Posted by: saskatoon
On: Oct 27, ‘09 5:51 pm

I second THAT!!  :thumbsup: I think there is alot of positve things that can be said for the Latin Mass over the Novus Ordo. The priests act like and dress like priests.  The music, even chanting, is prettier and most churches that have the latin mass give the feeling of being at a church.  Now that you have come to the latin mass it is going to be hard to go back to the NO church (for weddings or funerals, etc..), chances are, you will find it annoying there.
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ANSWER AND COMMENT BY “Windmill”:
Re: The new old Tridentine Mass
http://forums.catholic.com/showthread.php?p=5871171#post5871171
Posted by: Windmill
On: Oct 27, ‘09 5:59 pm

Your experience is identical to my own.  I think this is the continuity that our beloved HF is trying to recapture in promoting the Extraordinary Form of the Roman Rite of Mass.  My hope is that people will realize what they have been missing with the way the Ordinary Form has been offered in the past few decades, and they will start demanding more of a sacral atmosphere than a “community gathering”.

If you’d like to read more on liturgy, I’d highly recommend Reform of the Roman Liturgy (http://www.booksforcatholics.com/mm5/merchant.mvc?Screen=PROD&Store_Code=B&Product_Code=1-92929-88-4&Category_Code=), a book by a brilliant liturgist and theologian, Msgr. Klaus Gamber, whom Ratzinger admired immensely….and he even wrote the preface to the French edition of Gamber’s book.

The pendulum is swinging back to center.  Deo Gratias.

I don’t think that the New Mass has to be annoying.  Rather, I think that certain “options” that are not in continuity need to be exercised rarely.  That, however, is a judgment call beyond my vocation.  I also think that people our age don’t have any sense of what “being Catholic” was like for many generations of Catholics before us.  We aren’t familiar with “Ember Days”, “40 Hours Devotions”, fasting from the night before receiving Holy Communion, Confessionals that looked like confessionals (instead of therapy rooms), Septuagesima, fiddleback chasubles, Baptisms with a firey exorcism rite, Confirmation where the Bishop grilled you and then slapped you on the cheek, Prayers at the Foot of the Altar, the Last Gospel, ANTIPHON PROPERS (for crying out loud!!!), the Liber Usualis, Missa Orbis Factor, subdeacons, altar rails, reredos, and as you mentioned…….Latin and silence.

My hope is in God, but I can’t hide the fact that I am jazzed that Ratzinger is His vicar.

All the best,
Catholic Answers Forums

Anyone have any comments about this?



Thyroid and Its Troubles
October 26, 2009, 5:34 pm
Filed under: diet | Tags: , , ,

Incidentally, the results from my trial Atkins program were terrible. I am not used to fatty foods or meat. I can’t eat a large, heavy breakfast (I got sick the first morning after eating bacon & eggs).  I had a sick stomach most of the time and did not even want to eat. On top of that, I lost no weight.  Probably due to being hypothyroid (and I’ve been to 5 doctors over this with no improvement in 4 years) this diet or any diet will not enable weight loss. Complete failure. No more Atkins for me. I am now trying to add SuperFoods to my diet. One of them is goji berries, quite expensive, but may be worth it depending on the reason a person doesn’t feel well. Here’s my current smoothie recipe:

GOJI & BANANA SMOOTHIE-all ingredients should be organic

handful of goji berries

handful of raw oats

handful of wheat germ

a few cranberries or other berries

1 banana

1 raw egg

whole milk to make the right consistency

a drizzle of raw honey or other flavoring

any other raw greens, protein mix, etc. you want to add

Blend in blender or processor for at least 1 minute on high

(I am told that a very powerful blender is needed to break down raw greens)



What Blocks Your Mission?
October 26, 2009, 5:13 pm
Filed under: religious/spiritual | Tags: , , , ,

Tomorrow I will make a presentation to a women’s group on Mission and What Blocks Us.  I think it will be a very mixed group; black, white, disadvantaged persons along with a few nuns and ex-nuns and some mission people too.

We are commemorating the passing of three great friends in a short memorial service.  Afterward, we will talk about the example of one woman’s mission-that of Henriette DeLille who lived in New Orleans before the Civil War. In her day, because she was born of a mixed racial couple, the young mixed-race girls would be taken to grand balls to meet eligible white men who would take them for their mistresses. This was the tradition and it was what Henriette’s mother had done and wanted Henriette to do also. But Henriette saw another vision for herself. She defied custom and her mother to become a helper of the poor, and eventually a religious who began an order for “women of color”.

We are all pressured to go along with the crowd, the current fad, the popular things of this world. It takes much strength to see that what is popular is not always the best for yourself, and endeavor to follow your own path towards what might be more beneficial to your growth. Henriette found her mission. Had she succumbed to what was customary, she would never have come to do God’s work for the poor of her community, and never would have helped other women break free either.

What blocks us from our mission? Some are too ill, some too damaged emotionally, some just don’t have a chance. Most of us will not march off to Sri Lanka to be official missionaries.  But we each can do a little bit to bring love and God to our small place in the world.

I think fear is the number one thing that bars me from my mission. I’ve conquered unbelief, multiple emotional problems, and very low self-esteem. My nemesis now is actual  fear of being physically or emotionally harmed and traumatized by someone I may approach in order to minister to them.

St. Therese promoted the idea of “the little way”.  Her little way involved what we now call Acts of Random Kindness, especially to people who were difficult or in need. Mother Teresa said, “Do small things with Great Love“, and that has always stuck with me. Like beautiful flowers, we all must “bloom where are planted” and shine our colorful beauty out to others like beams of love. The love, like the flowers, comes from God; we merely reflect it as best we can.



Diet Rev
July 18, 2009, 10:45 pm
Filed under: Uncategorized | Tags: ,

I have been sick now for 2 weeks. A very bad cold on top of the 25 or 6 other chronic health problems I have doesn’t really make for a happy situation. It’s actually pretty miserable and on one evening I had to be taken to the emergency room to have IV fluids because I had dehydrated.

When I was growing up, no one I knew had any chronic illnesses, nor were there very many overweight people. We got colds, maybe had our tonsils out. That was the extent of illness. Nowadays, unprecedented millions of Americans have chronic illnesses, serious and debilitating, and are in the obese and severely obese categories to the point where people are actually having most of their stomachs removed so they can’t take in food. This is some kind of last resort before their systems collapse.

I just picked up an Atkin’s Diet book (50 cents at Goodwill) and have been reading what may be the most reasonable, sensible, option for people who are glucose intolerant (as I happen to be) and need to lose weight. I’ve read in several other places (Mother Earth News, for one), but never so authoritatively as here, in The New Diet Revolution, that what our agricultural industry is shipping to our grocery stores, what our meat industry is delivering to us, what the FDA is approving for us, and what we, as a result, are ingesting, is killing us. Slowly, painfully, little by little. The entire health care industry is reaping  massive profits from actions that ought to be capital crimes from the grand hoax that a low-fat, high whole-grain diet is the best for everyone. The U.S.D.A. Pyramid even illustrates this. You can look on their website: 9-12 servings of whole grains PER DAY is what they recommend. Don’t believe it!

As soon as I get feeling well enough, I am going to start the Atkin’s 14-day Induction part of the diet. I have already given away my ice cream bars and chips. If you are glucose-intolerant, or bordering on diabetes, or anything like that, I would recommend a read through Atkin’s to see if you think it might help you. I’ll keep you posted on my dieting project.



I’ll Say “Yes”
July 14, 2009, 2:57 pm
Filed under: Uncategorized

I’ll Say Yes- one of the great anthems by the Brooklyn Tabernacle. This song reminds me of all the religious men and women I’ve come across by way of the Web. Ask most average people and they’ll probably tell you religious life is dead in America. But it’s just not so. Many religious are leading quiet, hidden lives of prayer, many are habitless, still many more are simply the faithful going about their daily lives. God is not dead as some have said. He is very much alive, well, and still breathing-here, amidst the corrupt. He is here when a faithful person makes Him present- by their Love, by caring or showing kindness, by dedicating a moment, a day, or a life to God’s work, by their sacrifice of what they might want in order to tend to someone else. I’ll Say Yes to the Lord. He has called me from the depths of my heart and I have answered. Glory to God in the Highest.

If you have not already discovered Brooklyn Tabernacle, I urge you to get hold of one of their CDs. Next to Hillsong, this is the holiest, most soul-stirring stuff to come out of recent times that I have heard. Some of the pieces are exquisitely beautiful, excellent for meditation or praising, the fury of all the voices together does something to my heart



I’ll Say “Yes”
July 14, 2009, 2:54 pm
Filed under: Uncategorized | Tags: , , ,

I’ll Say Yes- one of the great anthems by the Brooklyn Tabernacle. This song reminds me of all the religious men and women I’ve come across by way of the Web. Ask most average people and they’ll probably tell you religious life is dead in America. But it’s just not so. Many religious are leading quiet, hidden lives of prayer, many are habitless, still many more are simply the faithful going about their daily lives. God is not dead as some have said. He is very much alive, well, and still breathing-here, amidst the corrupt. He is here when a faithful person makes Him present- by their Love, by caring or showing kindness, by dedicating a moment, a day, or a life to God’s work, by their sacrifice of what they might want in order to tend to someone else. I’ll Say Yes to the Lord. He has called me from the depths of my heart and I have answered. Glory to God in the Highest.

If you have not already discovered Brooklyn Tabernacle, I urge you to get hold of one of their CDs. Next to Hillsong, this is the holiest, most soul-stirring stuff to come out of recent times that I have heard. Some of the pieces are exquisitely beautiful, excellent for meditation or praising, the fury of all the voices together does something to my heart