Tuesday, July 31, 2012

The Holy Priesthood




Dr. Michael Barber

These profound talks will help Catholics respond to Pope Benedict XVI's call to celebrate a "Year for Priests," and increase appreciation for the holy priesthood. Dr. Michael Barber, professor of Theology and Scripture at John Paul The Great Catholic University, and Chase Hilgenbrinck, seminarian and former professional soccer player, share rich insights about this vocation to which select men are called by God to serve Christ and the Church.

....

Taken from: http://www.lighthousecatholicmedia.org/store/title/the-holy-priesthood



Other Recommended Titles:

St. Philomena - A Saint For Our Times


St. Philomena - A Saint For Our Times Though St. Philomena lived approximately 1700 years ago and was only discovered in the catacombs of Rome in the early 1800?s, her faithful witness as a young virgin who was martyred for her purity and for her fidelity to Christ speaks powerfully to our culture, and especially to young people. Commonly referred to as a ?wonder worker?, she has the distinction of being the only saint canonized solely on the basis of the profound miracles attributed to her intercession. Learn more about St. Philomena and what a powerful advocate we have before the throne of Almighty God.

Truly inspiring! Mark - Portland, OR

Dr. Mark Miravalle

5-Time Major League All-Star on Winning the Game for Christ

5-Time Major League All-Star on Winning the Game for Christ All star Mike Sweeney speaks to 5000 young adults about his own experience of living his Catholic Faith from when he was a high school jock, through his time in Major League baseball. With humor and humility, he shares the circumstances that led him to completely center his life on God, and how the Lord wants to personally be involved in your life, too. Mike relates how pivotal choices led to his amazing ride with Christ.

This presentation was fantastic ? Mike is a great role model for our times! I will give the CD to our youth groups and catechism students. Chirstopher - E. Harfortd, CT

Mike Sweeney

God's Family and Ours: The Church and the Trinity

God's Family and Ours: The Church and the Trinity Dr. Scott Hahn is a renowned Catholic theologian who is widely known for his journey as a Protestant pastor into the Catholic Church. He uses familiarity with family life to bring us to a deeper understanding of the Holy Trinity, and thereby a better understanding of ourselves and the Church. This presentation effectively illustrates how the "Good News" of salvation is not only being saved from our sins through the Cross of Christ, but an invitation to become and live as adopted sons and daughters of the Triune God.

Dr. Hahn has a unique way of making the hard-to-understand and hard-to-accept teachings simple and beautiful. Raphael - Orlando, FL

Dr. Scott Hahn

A Guide to Raising (almost) Perfect Kids

A Guide to Raising (almost) Perfect Kids Why don't kids come with an instruction manual? Actually, they do! In this packed presentation filled with humor and easy-to-apply practical examples, Dr. Gregory & Lisa Popcak and Dr. Ray Guarendi help you discover your own God-given instruction manual for creating an effective and life-changing parenting plan for your children.

Dr. Ray's keen insights and methods will transform your parenting skills. His truth is refreshing! Christina (Mom of 7) - Neenah, WI

Gregory Popcak and Lisa Popcak

My Spiritual Journey

My Spiritual Journey Formerly titled "A Call to Joy"

Matthew Kelly is one of the most sought-after speakers of our time. When he was a young man, a friend helped him to open his heart to God. Since that time, Matthew has helped millions around the world to embrace the Lord's call to live a deeper spiritual life. Listen as he shares both his remarkable personal story and his uniquely inspiring outlook on faith and the adventure of living the Christian life to the fullest.

Awesome! I loved this talk and came away with a fresh inspiration to grow my faith and find joy. This is perfect for all ages. I passed it on to my teenage sons. Cindy - Houston TX

Matthew Kelly

The Forgotten Virtue: Pathway to Holiness

The Forgotten Virtue: Pathway to Holiness God opposes the proud but bestows favor on the humble. (1 Peter 5:5) In this revealing talk, Fr. Casey shares how wisdom and blessings come through a healthy cultivation of the virtue of humility, and he equips us to be vigilant in avoiding that often subtle temptation and danger to the soul, which is pride. He shows how humility allows us to see things, and ourselves, as they truly are, and how pride makes us prone to serious mistakes, both in our spiritual and practical lives. At the end of this presentation is a bonus segment from Confession by Fr. Larry Richards.

This talk was extremely helpful in understanding how detrimental pride in one’s spiritual life can be, and also in recognizing true and false humility. Thanks, Fr. Casey! Patrick – McHenry, IL

Fr. William Casey

The Face of God

The Face of God Blessed Mother Teresa of Calcutta is known throughout the world as a woman totally committed to the Gospel. In the first presentation, she explains the infinite value of God's gift of life; in the second presentation, she emphasizes the Eucharist and our call to imitate Christ by loving each other unconditionally. A bonus segment is provided by Dr. Scott Hahn on Understanding the Eucharist.

What a blessing to hear the voice & teaching of Mother Teresa! I hung on her words, her wisdom - about the true value of every life. Ann - Niagara Falls, NY

Blessed Mother Teresa

Pursuing Holiness - Lessons from St. Francis de Sales

Pursuing Holiness - Lessons from St. Francis de SalesRenowned speaker and author, Ralph Martin, presents the timeless teachings of St. Francis de Sales, bishop, Doctor of the Church, and famous 16th century author, in a way that provides profound wisdom for living in today?s world. Through the inspirations of this influential and well-known saint, we gain great insight into how sin affects our lives, our relationships, and our witness to the world. St. Francis de Sales equips us in our pursuit of holiness, enabling us to live the fervent, authentic Catholic life to which we are called.

This talk really focuses on the truths of the human condition and how avoiding love for sin comes from our deepening love for God. Aaron - Palm Bay, FL

Ralph Martin

Understanding The Lord's Prayer

Understanding The Lord's Prayer The Lord's Prayer is the centerpiece of the most famous sermon ever preached - the Sermon on the Mount. The Catechism of the Catholic Church teaches that this prayer "is truly the summary of the whole Gospel." Blending scripture with the incredible insights of the early Church Fathers, Dr. Scott Hahn helps us discover the critical importance of this prayer in our daily journey of faith.

This is an absolutely brilliant outline giving biblical proof of the Real Presence of Christ in the Eucharist! Mike - Bogota, NJ

Dr. Scott Hahn

Becoming The-Best-Version-of-Yourself

Becoming The-Best-Version-of-Yourself Matthew Kelly possesses a powerful ability to combine the ageless tool of storytelling with a profound understanding of today's culture and the common yearnings of the human heart. He shows us how to see the challenges in our everyday lives in a new light. He will help elevate and energize you to pursue the highest values of the human spirit and become the best version of yourself.

OUTSTANDING!!! This timely presentation was filled with truth & presented in a way that was easy to identify with and understand. Anne - Youngstown, OH

Matthew Kelly




Sunday, July 29, 2012

Life-Changing Stories of the Eucharist




Jesse Romero

In this talk, Jesse Romero shares numerous encounters of the stunning power of Christ's presence in the Eucharist in his own life and in the lives of others, and a convincing presentation of history and theology as witnesses to this most incredible mystery and gift! Jesse is a renowned professional Catholic apologist with a Masters in Theology, a retired L.A. Deputy Sheriff, and a former Police Olympic boxing champion and USA kickboxing champion. He speaks on the radio and at conferences around the country with a refreshing, straightforward, pull no punches, high-energy style, and with passion for the Catholic Faith and our Eucharistic Lord.

....
 
Taken from: http://www.lighthousecatholicmedia.org/store/title/life-changing-stories-of-the-eucharist
 
 
 
Other Recommended Titles:

How to Bring Fallen Away Catholics Back

How to Bring Fallen Away Catholics Back What is evangelization all about? What role does the Church expect ordinary Catholics to play in spreading the Catholic Faith? Dr. Scott Hahn, author and renowned theologian, challenges ?cradle? Catholics to witness to the Faith through everyday life. He presents proven and effective ways to touch those who have fallen away from the Church, even those with the most hardened of hearts.

This strengthened my belief in the Catholic Church and helped me feel proud and confident about defending our Faith through example. Ariel - Whiting, IN

Dr. Scott Hahn

Church Beliefs

Church Beliefs Retired L.A. Deputy Sheriff, and a former Police Olympic boxing champion and USA kickboxing champion Jesse Romero presents core Catholic beliefs and explains how the power and truth of the Catholic Faith lie within God's Word rooted in Sacred Scripture and the Church's creeds and Magisterial Teachings. His powerful and energetic style will strengthen your faith and love for the truth and the gift of the Catholic Church and equip you to share it with others.

A very inspiring CD! Jesse sets a wonderful example of how and why we all should be excited about Jesus as our Lord and Savior. Larry - Rochester Hills, MI

Jesse Romero

Seven Reasons to be Catholic

Seven Reasons to be Catholic Dr. Peter Kreeft is a world-renowned philosopher and best-selling author of over 35 books. Drawing from the treasured wisdom of such great spiritual thinkers as St. John of the Cross, Thomas Aquinas, C. S. Lewis, and Cardinal Newman, he helps us to understand why truth trumps everything! Listen as he clearly presents seven undisputable reasons why every person should indeed be Catholic.

This CD has re-started the spark I had lost! I am looking forward to listening to the other CDs I purchased! Bob - Fremont, OH

Dr. Peter Kreeft

Confession

Confession Based upon his proven and powerful parish mission presentation, Fr. Larry Richards' talk on Confession has become the #1 talk in North America dealing with one of the Catholic Faith's most misunderstood Sacraments. He is riveting, honest, very human, often touchingly gentle, and yes, even humorous, and provides listeners with hope for a closer, healing relationship with Jesus Christ.

I re-evaluated my entire way of living because it made me realize that I was not as close to God as I thought! Brandy - Arlington, VA

Fr. Larry Richards

15 Things to Do in the Midst of Suffering

15 Things to Do in the Midst of Suffering Suffering is a mystery we all face at some time in our lives. Whether it is physical, emotional, or spiritual, it will test our faith. Internationally known speaker Jeff Cavins shares personal insights he gained through his own physical pain. He shows us how we can join our sufferings with those of Jesus on the cross, bringing renewed meaning to the suffering we experience in our lives.

Awesome! It reinforced what I knew and added some wisdom and understanding on suffering. I want to order 5-10 of these CDs to hand out to my family and friends. Mary - Freedom, WI

Jeff Cavins

The Healing Power of Confession

The Healing Power of Confession Dr. Scott Hahn presents the historical and biblical origins of the Sacrament of Penance (Reconciliation). He provides an important guide for new Catholics, a source of renewal for "old hands", and a challenge to all of us to deepen our relationship with Christ through regular use of the Sacrament of Penance.



This is an outstanding talk on Confession that cuts to the heart of this great Sacrament of Mercy. Father Joseph - Baltic, CT

Dr. Scott Hahn

Becoming The-Best-Version-of-Yourself

Becoming The-Best-Version-of-Yourself Matthew Kelly possesses a powerful ability to combine the ageless tool of storytelling with a profound understanding of today's culture and the common yearnings of the human heart. He shows us how to see the challenges in our everyday lives in a new light. He will help elevate and energize you to pursue the highest values of the human spirit and become the best version of yourself.

OUTSTANDING!!! This timely presentation was filled with truth & presented in a way that was easy to identify with and understand. Anne - Youngstown, OH

Matthew Kelly

Pursuing Holiness - Lessons from St. Francis de Sales

Pursuing Holiness - Lessons from St. Francis de SalesRenowned speaker and author, Ralph Martin, presents the timeless teachings of St. Francis de Sales, bishop, Doctor of the Church, and famous 16th century author, in a way that provides profound wisdom for living in today?s world. Through the inspirations of this influential and well-known saint, we gain great insight into how sin affects our lives, our relationships, and our witness to the world. St. Francis de Sales equips us in our pursuit of holiness, enabling us to live the fervent, authentic Catholic life to which we are called.

This talk really focuses on the truths of the human condition and how avoiding love for sin comes from our deepening love for God. Aaron - Palm Bay, FL

Ralph Martin

Seven Deadly Sins - Seven Lively Virtues

Seven Deadly Sins - Seven Lively Virtues Join noted Professor of Theology and author, Fr. Robert Barron, in this revealing presentation as he sheds light on the Seven Deadly Sins - those great spiritual blocks that inhibit our relationship with God and others - and the antidote to them, the Seven Lively Virtues! Fr. Barron uses Dante's DIVINE COMEDY to expose these sinful patterns in our lives and show how they are effectively counteracted by the cultivation of virtue through the development of the gifts of the Holy Spirit. This fascinating journey shows the path that God has designed to lead us to health, happiness and holiness.



Absolutely wonderful! I love how Fr. Barron gives practical ways to use the information he’s presenting. Nancy - Warroad, MN

Fr. Robert Barron

Praying the Rosary Like Never Before

Praying the Rosary Like Never Before Dr. Edward Sri is a nationally sought Catholic speaker who appears regularly on EWTN, and is a founding leader of FOCUS (Fellowship of Catholic University Students). In this discussion of his book The New Rosary in Scripture: Biblical Insights on Praying the Twenty Mysteries (Servant Books), Dr. Sri shares John Paul II's practical strategies for praying the Rosary better, so that you can encounter Jesus more deeply in prayer.





Awesome! Dr. Sri covers this subject in depth. I’ll need to listen to it two or three times to find all the golden nuggets hidden in this talk. Richard - Simi Valley, CA

Dr. Edward Sri

Wednesday, July 25, 2012

Finding the Fullness of Faith





Stephen Ray

Stephen Ray was raised in a devout, loving, Baptist family. In this presentation, he shares his amazing conversion to Catholicism and explains why he is convinced it is the Church founded by Christ over 2000 years ago.

....

Taken from: http://www.lighthousecatholicmedia.org/store/title/finding-the-fullness-of-faith



Other Recommended Titles:

Which Came First - the Bible or the Church?


Which Came First - the Bible or the Church?

Have you ever been asked where Catholic beliefs can be found in the bible? Here is a crash course in history proving that the bible is a Catholic book. Matthew Arnold offers convincing evidence showing that the Church has faithfully proclaimed and preserved the fullness of God's Word down through the centuries. This will provide all the facts you need.


I wish I had this CD 40 years ago! I think every Catholic family and school should have a copy!

Patricia - Dunnellon, FL

Matthew Arnold

Why a Protestant Pastor Became Catholic

Why a Protestant Pastor Became Catholic Dr. Scott Hahn explains through his legendary testimony how he was militantly anti-Catholic but self-driven to seek the truth. This ultimately led him into the Catholic Church. He soon became an ardent defender of the Faith and one of its most passionate promoters.



This CD was AMAZING!!! I was having doubts as to what I believed. Thanks to this talk, I finally found hope I thought did not exist. Jeff - New Lenox, IL

Dr. Scott Hahn

How to Bring Fallen Away Catholics Back

How to Bring Fallen Away Catholics Back What is evangelization all about? What role does the Church expect ordinary Catholics to play in spreading the Catholic Faith? Dr. Scott Hahn, author and renowned theologian, challenges ?cradle? Catholics to witness to the Faith through everyday life. He presents proven and effective ways to touch those who have fallen away from the Church, even those with the most hardened of hearts.

This strengthened my belief in the Catholic Church and helped me feel proud and confident about defending our Faith through example. Ariel - Whiting, IN

Dr. Scott Hahn

The Bible Made Me Do It

The Bible Made Me Do It Tim Staples was raised Baptist and served as an Assembly of God Youth Minister. He used his extensive biblical knowledge to attack the Catholic Church but when he was challenged on his beliefs, a two-year search for truth led him right to Catholicism. Now he uses that same incredible gift to defend the Faith and help others to embrace the beauty and richness of Catholicism.


Humorous, insightful, moving, and motivating! A blockbuster in the making ? I want more of this!! Terry - Plainfield, IL

Tim Staples

Seven Reasons to be Catholic

Seven Reasons to be Catholic Dr. Peter Kreeft is a world-renowned philosopher and best-selling author of over 35 books. Drawing from the treasured wisdom of such great spiritual thinkers as St. John of the Cross, Thomas Aquinas, C. S. Lewis, and Cardinal Newman, he helps us to understand why truth trumps everything! Listen as he clearly presents seven undisputable reasons why every person should indeed be Catholic.

This CD has re-started the spark I had lost! I am looking forward to listening to the other CDs I purchased! Bob - Fremont, OH

Dr. Peter Kreeft

Quest for Truth: A Convert's Perspect

Quest for Truth: A Convert's Perspect David Currie is a former Evangelical missionary whose upbringing was immersed in Evangelical Protestantism. He candidly shares how his struggles with the interpretation of many biblical passages led him on a dramatic search for truth. This moving testimony recounts his family's difficult journey into Catholicism and the great joy they experienced in finding the pearl of great price.

Wow! This CD helped me understand why converts are such good Catholics! Howard - Montgomery, AL

David Currie

The Lamb's Supper

The Lamb's Supper Based on his best-selling book, Dr. Scott Hahn reveals the early Christians? key to understanding the Mass: the Book of Revelation. With its bizarre imagery, mystic visions of Heaven, and end-times prophecies, it mirrors the sacrifice and celebration of the Holy Eucharist. See the Mass with new eyes, pray the Liturgy with a renewed heart, and enter into the Mass more fully and enthusiastically!

Excellent! It is hard to express the spiritual impact this CD has had on me. I don't believe I will ever celebrate the Eucharist the same way again! Floy - Manchester, KY

Dr. Scott Hahn

The Healing Power of Confession

The Healing Power of Confession Dr. Scott Hahn presents the historical and biblical origins of the Sacrament of Penance (Reconciliation). He provides an important guide for new Catholics, a source of renewal for "old hands", and a challenge to all of us to deepen our relationship with Christ through regular use of the Sacrament of Penance.



This is an outstanding talk on Confession that cuts to the heart of this great Sacrament of Mercy. Father Joseph - Baltic, CT

Dr. Scott Hahn

Becoming The-Best-Version-of-Yourself

Becoming The-Best-Version-of-Yourself Matthew Kelly possesses a powerful ability to combine the ageless tool of storytelling with a profound understanding of today's culture and the common yearnings of the human heart. He shows us how to see the challenges in our everyday lives in a new light. He will help elevate and energize you to pursue the highest values of the human spirit and become the best version of yourself.

OUTSTANDING!!! This timely presentation was filled with truth & presented in a way that was easy to identify with and understand. Anne - Youngstown, OH

Matthew Kelly

My Spiritual Journey

My Spiritual Journey Formerly titled "A Call to Joy"



Matthew Kelly is one of the most sought-after speakers of our time. When he was a young man, a friend helped him to open his heart to God. Since that time, Matthew has helped millions around the world to embrace the Lord's call to live a deeper spiritual life. Listen as he shares both his remarkable personal story and his uniquely inspiring outlook on faith and the adventure of living the Christian life to the fullest.

Awesome! I loved this talk and came away with a fresh inspiration to grow my faith and find joy. This is perfect for all ages. I passed it on to my teenage sons. Cindy - Houston TX

Matthew Kelly

Tuesday, July 24, 2012

Seven Last Sayings of Christ





Dr. Peter Kreeft

Dr. Peter Kreeft is a world-renowned philosopher and best-selling author of over 35 books. Drawing from the treasured wisdom of such great spiritual thinkers as St. John of the Cross, Thomas Aquinas, C.S. Lewis, and Cardinal Newman, he helps us to understand why truth trumps everything! Listen as he clearly presents seven indisputable reasons why every person should indeed be Catholic.

....

Taken from: http://www.lighthousecatholicmedia.org/store/title/seven-last-sayings-of-christ



Other Recommended Titles:

How to Bring Fallen Away Catholics Back


How to Bring Fallen Away Catholics Back What is evangelization all about? What role does the Church expect ordinary Catholics to play in spreading the Catholic Faith? Dr. Scott Hahn, author and renowned theologian, challenges ?cradle? Catholics to witness to the Faith through everyday life. He presents proven and effective ways to touch those who have fallen away from the Church, even those with the most hardened of hearts.

This strengthened my belief in the Catholic Church and helped me feel proud and confident about defending our Faith through example. Ariel - Whiting, IN

Dr. Scott Hahn

Making Sense Out of Suffering

Making Sense Out of Suffering We all experience suffering at some time in our lives. Our tribulations range from small disappointments to serious tragedies. Listen as scripture scholar and lay theologian, Dr. Scott Hahn, makes sense out of suffering by drawing from the wisdom and insight of God's Word. He helps us find the meaning of our suffering by showing us how to unite it to the suffering of Christ on the Cross.

One day we are all going to face suffering in one form or another. To have this spiritual knowledge will make that journey endurable. Jay - Cincinnati, OH

Dr. Scott Hahn

The Fourth Cup

The Fourth Cup Well-known Catholic theologian Dr. Scott Hahn explains Christ's Paschal Sacrifice on the cross as the fulfillment of the traditional fourth cup used in the celebration of the Jewish Passover meal. He draws a symbolic parallel to the Last Supper and Christ's death on Calvary. Through his scholarly insights and important biblical connections, Mass will come alive for you as never before!

Thank you! This put all the pieces of the puzzle together concerning the Holy Eucharist. The Mass has come alive for me and my family! Joe - Kettering, OH

Dr. Scott Hahn

The Lamb's Supper

The Lamb's Supper Based on his best-selling book, Dr. Scott Hahn reveals the early Christians? key to understanding the Mass: the Book of Revelation. With its bizarre imagery, mystic visions of Heaven, and end-times prophecies, it mirrors the sacrifice and celebration of the Holy Eucharist. See the Mass with new eyes, pray the Liturgy with a renewed heart, and enter into the Mass more fully and enthusiastically!

Excellent! It is hard to express the spiritual impact this CD has had on me. I don't believe I will ever celebrate the Eucharist the same way again! Floy - Manchester, KY

Dr. Scott Hahn

Understanding the Eucharist

Understanding the Eucharist A former Protestant minister, Dr. Scott Hahn was a militant opponent of the Catholic Church. Now one of the foremost Catholic theologians in the world, he highlights the key misunderstandings people have about the Eucharist. In this powerful presentation, he explains the Church's teaching from a scriptural and historical perspective in an entertaining and thorough fashion.

This is an absolutely brilliant outline giving biblical proof of the Real Presence of Christ in the Eucharist! Mike - Bogota, NJ

Dr. Scott Hahn

Why Is There Hell? What You Should Know About It!

Why Is There Hell? What You Should Know About It! In this moving study on hell, Dr. Scott Hahn shares what scripture teaches about why hell is necessary. What it is like? Who goes there? How can you stay out forever? He explains why Lucifer refused to serve and then responds from a scriptural perspective to the most seductive modern errors about hell. Included are two bonus excerpts from Dr. Hahn's talk, The Healing Power of Confession.

This is a great CD! It gives the theological basis for hell. For me, it also highlighted the need for continued conversion throughout life. Chad - St. Michael, MN

Dr. Scott Hahn

Discovering the Biblical Significance of Mary

Discovering the Biblical Significance of Mary In one of the most inspiring CDs we have ever offered on the Virgin Mary, Dr. Scott Hahn reveals incredible insights on the Biblical basis for the Catholic teachings regarding Mary as the Ark of the New Covenant. This presentation will help shatter many misconceptions and clearly demonstrate how Catholic teachings are unmistakably rooted in Sacred Scripture. Following the presentation is a bonus segment from a prior talk by Dr. Hahn, "Why Do We Have a Pope?"

Wow! This is by far one of the most inspiring CDs I have heard so far! I can't say enough about it! William - Spring Hill, FL

Dr. Scott Hahn

Understanding The Lord's Prayer

Understanding The Lord's Prayer The Lord's Prayer is the centerpiece of the most famous sermon ever preached - the Sermon on the Mount. The Catechism of the Catholic Church teaches that this prayer "is truly the summary of the whole Gospel." Blending scripture with the incredible insights of the early Church Fathers, Dr. Scott Hahn helps us discover the critical importance of this prayer in our daily journey of faith.

This is an absolutely brilliant outline giving biblical proof of the Real Presence of Christ in the Eucharist! Mike - Bogota, NJ

Dr. Scott Hahn

Seven Deadly Sins - Seven Lively Virtues

Seven Deadly Sins - Seven Lively Virtues Join noted Professor of Theology and author, Fr. Robert Barron, in this revealing presentation as he sheds light on the Seven Deadly Sins - those great spiritual blocks that inhibit our relationship with God and others - and the antidote to them, the Seven Lively Virtues! Fr. Barron uses Dante's DIVINE COMEDY to expose these sinful patterns in our lives and show how they are effectively counteracted by the cultivation of virtue through the development of the gifts of the Holy Spirit. This fascinating journey shows the path that God has designed to lead us to health, happiness and holiness.

Absolutely wonderful! I love how Fr. Barron gives practical ways to use the information he’s presenting. Nancy - Warroad, MN

Fr. Robert Barron

How to Get the Most Out of Mass

How to Get the Most Out of Mass Dr. Scott Hahn takes us through the awesome grandeur of the Holy Sacrifice of the Mass, from the entrance song to the dismissal. With great clarity, he takes us through a basic outline of the structure of the Mass, explaining how the Sacred Liturgy transforms the ordinary into the extraordinary and the earthly into the heavenly. A must-have for every Catholic and non-Catholic who wants to know what the Mass is all about.

Your whys and wherefores will be answered! Carrie - Columbus, OH

Dr. Scott Hahn

Monday, July 23, 2012

I am thirsty



....
"...I thirst for you. Yes, that is the only way to even begin to describe my love for you: I thirst for you. I thirst to love and to be loved by you - that is how precious you are to me. I thirst for you. Come to me, and fill your heart and heal your wounds.

 
If you feel unimportant in the eyes of the world, that matters not at all. For me, there is no one any more important in the entire world than you. I thirst for you. Open to me, come to me, thirst for me, give me your life - and I will prove to you how important you are to my heart..." - I Thirst for You by Mother Teresa

 
"I thirst." These words of Jesus spoken from the cross had a special meaning for Mother Teresa. In the chapel of her Missionaries of Charity in Dorchester, these words appear in cut-out paper letters attached to the wall at the side of the tabernacle. Here Mother Teresa spent time in prayer before the Blessed Sacrament each day. Here she and the sisters gather in similar chapels around the world to pour themselves out as an offering of love before the Lord. Here the Lord filled their thirst and strengthened them for their witness of love in the Mass." -- "I thirst" had a special meaning for Mother Teresa by Cardinal Law

 
"...Mother Teresa of Calcutta ordered that Jesus' words "I thirst!" should appear next to the cross in all her communities around the world. "The Lord is thirsty for our love, for our heart. He wants to give himself to us. And through us, he wishes to give his love to others..." -- Tragedy of our time is loss of sense of sin - Archbishop of Vienna Addresses International Eucharistic Congress - Zenit News Agency

 
Lord,
 
When I am hungry, send me someone to feed;
 
When I am thirsty, send me someone who needs a drink;
 
When I am cold, send me someone to warm;
 
When I am sad, send me someone to cheer;
 
When I need understanding, send me someone who needs mine;
 
When I need to be looked after, send me someone to care for;
 
When I think only of myself, draw my thoughts to another.
 
So let us pray as though everything depends on God,
 
and work as though God depends on us for everything.

Amen -- from Via Pacis

 
'I THIRST' must remain a cry of mystery.
 
"...The One who created the seas needs a drink of water. Somehow we understand that Jesus Christ is very MAN as well as very God. He is forever committed to be one with YOU and with ME. He is forever one of US!
 
But 'I THIRST' is assurance of understanding at the throne. At the heart of God is one who KNOWS what it is like to be human and to suffer -- to be alone -- to hurt -- to weep -- to thirst! When WE hurt, Jesus hurts! For He cares!" -- Reflection on John 19:28

Thou, the great God Whom earth and heaven adore,
 
Thou dwellest a prisoner for me night and day;
 
And every hour I hear Thy voice implore:
 
" I thirst - I thirst - I thirst - for love alway!
 
I, too, Thy prisoner am I;
 
I, too, cry ever unto Thee
 
Thine own divine and tender cry:
 
"I thirst! Oh, let me die
 
Of love for Thee!"
 
For love of Thee I thirst! Fulfil my hope;
 
Augment in me Thine own celestial flame!
 
For love of Thee I thirst! Too scant earth's scope.
 
The glorious Vision of Thy Face I claim!
 
-- I Thirst for Love, Saint Therese of Lisieux

 
"This morning, with deep emotion, I celebrated Mass for her [Mother Teresa], an unforgettable witness of a love made concrete and unceasing service to the poorest and most marginalized of our brethren. In the face of those in misery she recognized Jesus' face, imploring from the Cross: 'I am thirsty.' And, with generous surrender of the self, she listened to that cry from the lips and hearts of the dying, of abandoned little ones, of men and women crushed by the weight of suffering and loneliness." -- John Paul II, quoted in Mother Theresa

Lord, Jesus,
 
you are the fountain for which I thirst,
 
you are the Master whom I seek.
 
In your presence
 
I dare not claim to be without sin,
 
for you alone are the Holy One of God.
 
I open my heart to you in faith,
 
I confess my faults
 
and lay bare my hidden wounds.
 
In your love free me from my infirmities,
 
heal my sickness,
 
quench my thirst and give me peace.
 
-- from We Thirst for Living Water

 
Adapted to the first person from the First Scrutiny - The Third Sunday of Lent
 
The Rite of Christian Initiation of Adults [164].
 
"It is there in His Eucharist that He says to me: 'I thirst, thirst for your love, your sacrifices, your sufferings. I thirst for your happiness, for it was to save you that I came into the world, that I suffered and died on the Cross, and in order to console and strengthen you I left you the Eucharist. So you have there all my life, all my tenderness.'" --
 
From Mother Mary of Jesus, the Foundress of the Sisters of Marie Reparatrice
 

....
 




Sunday, July 22, 2012

St. Maximilian Kolbe and the Immaculate Conception



by
 
Dwight P. Campbell

....

In the wake of the 150th anniversary of the proclamation of the Dogma of the Immaculate Conception, it is good to reflect upon Mary not only as a passive recipient of a singular grace from God that preserved her from all stain of sin from the moment of her conception, but also to consider the effects of this singular grace as an active, militant force in Mary — something revealed in the Protoevangelium, the first announcement of the Good News "I will put enmities between thee and the woman, and thy seed and her seed: she will crush thy head, and thou shalt lie in wait for her heel" (Gen. 3:15).1 Certainly St. Maximilian Kolbe saw this revelation of Mary's Immaculate Conception in this light; in fact, it was what inspired him to found an association which reflects this notion in its very name: the Militia Immaculatae.

 
In order to better understand the specific Marian charism of the MI, we will begin with a look at the life of St. Maximilian, his reasons for founding the MI, and his Marian spirituality. We will then reflect on the meaning of Gen. 3:15 in reference to Mary and Satan in God's salvific plan.
 

St. Maximilian Kolbe: His early life
 
Maximilian Kolbe was born in Poland on January 8, 1894 and was baptized on his birth date with the name Raymond. Maximilian (the name he would take in religious life) was a highly intelligent boy, and boisterous, but rather obstinate and self-willed. At about the age of nine, shortly after having made his First Holy Communion, an incident took place that would forever change him. One day in church while he was praying before a statue of Our Lady, Mary appeared to him holding two crowns: a white crown for purity, and a red crown for martyrdom. She asked him if he wanted them and Maximilian responded, "Yes" — he wanted both crowns. After this apparition his mother, Maria, noticed a sudden and profound change in her son: he was meditative, solemn, and often found praying before a statue of Our Lady in their home.2

As a teenager Maximilian was a highly gifted student and excelled in science and math. At sixteen he seriously considered entering the military but instead, with encouragement by his mother, he chose to enter religious life, the Conventual Franciscan Friars (OFM Conv.). His superiors recognized his intellectual gifts and in 1912 sent him to Rome for studies, where he lived until 1919. He earned doctorates in both philosophy and theology.
 
The founding of the Militia
 
In 1917, while still in the seminary and a year before his priesthood ordination, Maximilian founded the MI. The original charter for the MI was written on one page, and reads as follows:
 
"She will crush your head" (Gen. 3:15)."You alone have destroyed all heresies in the whole world" [from the Office of the Blessed Virgin Mary in the Liturgy of the Hours in use until 1975].



I. The Purpose:



Pursue the conversion of every person living in sin, heresy, schism and especially Freemasonry, and growth in holiness of all persons, under the sponsorship and through the mediation of the B.V.M. Immaculate.



II. Conditions:



1. [Make a] total oblation of oneself to the B.V.M. Immaculate as an instrument in her immaculate hands



2. Carry or wear the Miraculous Medal



III. Means:



1. Offer the following earnest prayer to the Immaculata once a day if possible: "O Mary, conceived without sin, pray for us who have recourse to you and for all who do not have recourse to you, especially for all the Freemasons."



2. [Use] all the legitimate means that one's particular state in life, conditions and varying opportunities make possible, [the choice of] which is left to the zeal and prudence of each member, but especially, [propagate] the Miraculous Medal.



V. Allow me (us) to praise you, most Holy Virgin.



R. Give me (us) the strength against your enemies.3



The MI, as its name indicates, is a "militia;" an army or fighting force of Marian "knights." Kolbe had read St. Louis de Montfort's True Devotion to Mary, and like de Montfort he urged members of his militia to totally consecrate their lives to Mary by means of the following prayer which he penned:



Immaculata, Queen of Heaven and earth, refuge of sinners and our most loving Mother, God has willed to entrust the entire order of mercy to you."I, N____, a repentant sinner, cast myself at your feet humbly imploring you to take me with all that I am and have wholly to yourself as your possession and property.



Please make of me, of all my powers of soul and body, of my whole life, death, and eternity, whatever most pleases you. If it pleases you, use all that I am and have without reserve . . .



Let me be a fit instrument in your immaculate and merciful hands for introducing and increasing your glory to the maximum in all the many strayed and indifferent souls and thus help extend as far as possible the blessed kingdom of the most Sacred Heart of Jesus. For whatever you enter you obtain the grace of conversion and growth in holiness, since it is through your hands that all graces come to us from the most Sacred Heart of Jesus."4



The Polish friar believed firmly in utilizing all modern methods of communication to spread the message of the Gospel, under the auspices of the Immaculata, and said these means should include "the printed word, radio broadcasts, even television [then a new medium], and the cinema."5 After leaving Rome he returned to Poland and launched a monthly periodical, The Knight of the Immaculata. In 1927 Kolbe founded Niepokalanov, the "City of the Immaculata," which served as a center for his publishing efforts. By 1937 the monthly Knighthad a circulation of 780,000, and in 1939 Niepokalanov was the largest monastery in the world, with 619 religious and 120 seminarians.



Kolbe's Marian spirituality



In addition to the apparition of Our Lady in his youth, a number of factors contributed to St. Maximilian's Marian spirituality. Fr. Luigi Faccenda says these include the great Franciscan tradition of honoring Our Lady under her title, the Immaculate Conception; and the apparitions of Our Lady in the previous century: in 1830 to St. Catherine Laboure (the Miraculous Medal), and in 1858 to St. Bernadette at Lourdes.6



In 1830, twenty-four years before Pope (now Blessed) Pius IX defined that Mary by a singular grace was conceived without the stain of Original Sin, Our Lady appeared to a French nun, Catherine Laboure, at the Chapel on the Rue de Bac in Paris. St. Catherine saw Our Lady as the Immaculate Conception, standing atop a globe with her foot over the head of the serpent, Satan, in fulfillment of Gen. 3:15. In the same apparition Mary appeared as our Mother in the Order of Grace:7St. Catherine saw Mary with rays emanating from her outstretched hands, representing the grace of Christ which she mediates for us as our Mother and Queen in Heaven.



Mary instructed St. Catherine to have a medal fashioned as she (Mary) appeared, with the words, "O Mary conceived without sin, pray for us who have recourse to thee," around the outer edge of the medal. On the back of the medal appears a cross with a large "M" beneath it, symbolizing Mary's unique cooperation in the redeeming work of Christ; for it was while she stood at the foot of the Cross that Jesus announced to her that she is now our Mother as well as his: "Woman, behold, your son . . . ;" and to John, the disciple: "Behold your mother" (John 19:26-27).



Beneath the "M" surmounted by the Cross appears on the left the Sacred Heart of Jesus, surrounded by thorns; and on the right the Immaculate Heart of Mary, pierced by a sword. Here we see revealed the mystical union of the Hearts of Jesus and Mary; a union which began at the Incarnation when the Heart of the Redeemer began to beat beneath the Heart of Mary, and which was consummated on Calvary when, fulfilling Simeon's prophecy (Luke 2:35), Mary's Heart was pierced with a sword of sorrow, and the "living waters" of Christ's grace (John 7:38) flowed from the pierced Heart of the Lamb into Mary's Immaculate Heart, in order to be dispensed by the Holy Spirit into our hearts.



One of the reasons why Kolbe envisioned the Miraculous Medal to play such a prominent part in the apostolic mission of the MI is due to its influence in converting Alphonse Ratisbonne. Ratisbonne, an agnostic Jew, was wearing a Miraculous Medal when Our Lady appeared to him at the church of Sant' Andrea delle Fratte in Rome in 1842. he was instantly converted, having walked out a Catholic, saying that he now "understood all." Learning of Ratisbonne's conversion through this medal was one of the events that inspired Kolbe to found the MI. As Fr. Alberto Arzilli, OFM Conv., a fellow friar with Kolbe, related the story on April 26, 1942:



"Fr. Maximilian . . . was convinced of what he had to do [regarding the founding of the MI] on the [75th] anniversary day of the apparition of Our Lady to Alphonse Ratisbonne, January 20, 1917. The inspiration came to him during the morning meditation conducted by the . . . Father Rector Ignudi. In the meditation Father Ignudi told the story of Ratisbonne's miraculous conversion and commented on it."With a face beaming and bubbling with joy at the power of Our Lady shown in the conversion of Ratisbonne, Friar Max spoke to me of his inspiration. Smiling, he told me we had to crush the Devil and all heresies, and especially the error of Masonry.8



Later that same year, on October 16, 1917, the MI was established when Kolbe and seven others met for the first time with the permission of the Father Rector. The following year, in 1918, after his priesthood ordination, Fr. Kolbe offered his first Mass at Sant' Andrea delle Fratte, in the chapel where Ratisbonne's vision occurred. Today the busts of both Kolbe and Ratisbonne stand in the church.



The apparition of Mary at Lourdes



In 1858, four years after Bl. Pius IX defined the Dogma of the Immaculate Conception, the Blessed Virgin Mary appeared to little fourteen-year-old Bernadette Soubirous a total of eighteen times at Lourdes, France. For St. Maximilian, the words Our Lady spoke to St. Bernadette, "Que soy era immaculada councepciou" ("I am the Immaculate Conception"), contain an unfathomable mystery that haunted him, as it were, for his entire adult life. Writing in 1933, he said:



Who and what is the Immaculata? Who can understand her perfectly? . . . We all understand what "mother" means; but "mother of God" is something that our reason and our limited intellect cannot really grasp. So too, only God really understands what "immaculate" means. "Conceived without sin" we can fathom up to a point; but "Immaculate Conception" is an expression that abounds in the most consoling of mysteries.9



In his writings on the "Immaculata" (the name he used for Mary under the title, Immaculate Conception), he would often ask, "Who are you?" For Our Lady did not say "I was immaculately conceived," but rather identified herself, her very being ("I am") with the "Immaculate Conception." Kolbe says these words of Mary "point up not only the fact that she was conceived without sin, but also the manner in which this privilege belongs to her. It is not something accidental; it is something that belongs to her very nature. For she is Immaculate Conception in person."10



The above words are taken from the Polish Martyr's last writing, a few hours before his final arrest by the Nazis on February 17, 1941, when he would be taken to Auschwitz and eventually be killed by lethal injection after offering his life in place of a fellow prisoner. In this same "Final Sketch" Kolbe arrived at a profound insight, an "answer" it seems (at least in part) to his persistent question, "Who are you, Immaculata?": he calls Mary the created Immaculate Conception, created sinless and from conception uniquely filled with an abundance of grace, in order to be made superabundantly fruitful when she would become the Mother of God through the work of the Holy Spirit. As Kolbe says: "He [the Holy Spirit] makes her fruitful, from the very first instant of her existence, all during her life, and for all eternity."11 Additionally, he calls the Holy Spirit the Uncreated, EternalImmaculate Conception, who is "conceived" from the love that flows eternally between the Father and the Son; a love so perfect that it is personified. Kolbe explains:



Everything that exists, outside of God himself, since it is from God and depends upon him in every way, bears within itself some semblance to its Creator . . . because every created thing is an effect of the Primal Cause.It is true that the words we use to speak of created realities express the divine perfections only in a halting, limited and analogical manner. They are only a more or less distant echo — as are created realities that they signify — of the properties of God himself.



Would not "conception" be an exception to this rule? No, there is never any exception . . .



And who is the Holy Spirit? The flowering of the love of the Father and the Son. If the fruit of created love is a created conception, then the fruit of divine Love, that prototype of all created love, is necessarily a divine "conception." The Holy Spirit is, therefore, the "uncreated, eternal conception," the prototype of all the conceptions that multiply life throughout the whole universe.12



In other writings the Polish friar attempts to describe Mary's deep, intimate union with the Third Person of the Trinity from her conception, by calling Mary the "quasi-incarnation" of the Holy Spirit.13 He is careful to stress that this union "is not of the same order as the hypostatic union linking the human and divine natures in Christ";14 for he repeated often that the Holy Spirit does not dwell in Mary in the same way in which the Eternal Word is present in the sacred humanity of Jesus.15 The notion of the Holy Spirit becoming "in some manner" (quasi) incarnate in Mary may at first seem to be an extreme idea. However, it is somewhat analogous to the statement by St. Louis de Montfort, that "God the Son wishes to form himself, and in a manner of speaking, become incarnate every day in his members through his dear Mother."16Along the same lines, St. Paul says: "It is no longer I who live, but Christ who lives in me" (Gal. 2:20).



With the term "quasi-incarnation" Kolbe means that Mary is so much like (quasi) the Holy Spirit, in that she reflects the Third Person of the Trinity especially in two qualities or attributes: receptivity and fruitfulness. The Holy Spirit is the Fruit of the Father and the Son. He was "eternally conceived," if you will, as the Fruit of the all-pure love which has forever flowed between the Father and the Son. He receives the mutual love of the Father and the Son and eternally fructifies it within the inner life of the Trinity.17 Mary's sinlessness from conception is the fruit of God's love. At Mary's conception the Holy Spirit conformed her to himself. The Blessed Virgin, by reason of the singular grace of her Immaculate Conception, is totally receptive to the love of God. At the Annunciation she receives God's love and in cooperation with the Holy Spirit makes that love fruitful — infinitely so — in conceiving the Incarnate Word.18



Mary's receptivity and fruitfulness did not end with the Conception and Birth of Christ. Now in Heaven, Mary remains the living, human conduit for the graces that the Holy Spirit distributes to us. As Kolbe says:



[T]he Holy Spirit manifests his share in the word of Redemption through the Immaculate Virgin who, although she is a person entirely distinct from him, is so intimately associated with him that our minds cannot understand it. So, while their union is not of the same order as the hypostatic union linking the human and divine natures in Christ, it remains true to say that Mary's action is the very action of the Holy Spirit.19



St. Maximilian sees Mary's ineffable union with the Holy Spirit from the very first instant of her conception as giving her a privileged place in God's saving plan. In keeping with what God has revealed in Scripture and Tradition regarding Mary's intercessory role in the order of grace, he says:



When we reflect on these two truths: that all graces come from the Father by the Son and the Holy Spirit; and that our Holy Mother Mary is, so to speak, one with the Holy Spirit, we are driven to the conclusion that this Most Holy Mother is indeed the intermediary by whom all graces come to us.20



All of God's grace comes to us through Mary's intercession. This is the "descending" order of grace. For Kolbe, there is a corresponding "ascending" order, for Mary is our means for going to God: "Have no doubt that her will is entirely united to God's will. It is a matter, then, of uniting our will to hers, and thus we will be united to God through her."21The Polish Saint sees uniting oneself to Mary as the means of conquering the world for Christ:



"The Knights of the Immaculata [members of the MI movement] seek to become ever more truly the property of the Immaculata; to belong to her in an ever more perfect way and under every aspect without any exception. They wish to develop their understanding of what it means to belong to her so that they may enlighten, reinvigorate, and set on fire the souls living in their own environment, and make them similar to themselves. They desire to conquer these souls for the Immaculata, so that in their turn they may belong without reserve and may in this manner win an ever greater number of souls to her — may win the entire world, in fact, and do so in the shortest possible time."22



Perhaps what most attracted St. Maximilian to Mary is her beauty: the beauty of the deep and unfathomable mystery of her Immaculate Conception, and the beauty of her spotless purity throughout the entirety of her earthly life, which now radiates forth in heaven. St. Bernadette gives witness to this when, describing the apparitions at Lourdes, she says of Our Lady: "She is so beautiful, that one would be willing to die to see her again."



The evil of Freemasonry



Another reason that motivated Kolbe to found the MI, as reflected in his original charter quoted earlier, and alluded to in the testimony of Fr. Arzilli, quoted above, is the "error of Masonry." By 1917 Italian Masonry was boldly rearing its ugly head in opposition to the Church. Writing in 1935 about the founding of the MI back in 1917, St. Maximilian said:



[T]he Freemasons in Rome began to demonstrate openly and belligerently against the Church. They placed the black standard of the "Giordano Brunisti" under the window of the Vatican. [Giordano Bruno was a Dominican turned Calvinist turned pantheist who was burned as a heretic on Feb. 17, 1600. This Masonic demonstration most likely occurred on Feb. 17 to commemorate his death]. On this standard the archangel St. Michael was depicted lying under the feet of the triumphant Lucifer. At the same time, countless pamphlets were distributed to the people in which the Holy Father was attacked shamefully. "Right then I conceived the idea of organizing an active society to counteract Freemasonry and other slaves of Lucifer . . .23



In 1939, writing in the Latin magazine for priests which he began publishing a year earlier, Miles Immaculatae, Kolbe said this about the Masonic demonstrations against the Church and Masonry's evil designs:



[During the marches around the Vatican on Brunisti's anniversary], some enraged hands dared to write such slogans as, 'Satan will rule on Vatican Hill, and the Pope will serve as his lackey,' and other such insults. Now these unreasoning acts of hatred toward the Church of Christ and his temporal Vicar were not the inept rantings of a few individual psychopaths, but the manner, way and plan of action deduced from the Masonic rule: Destroy all teaching about God, especially the Catholic teaching.Centers of this secret society have been established in every region. Nevertheless in various ways they more or less openly promote the same thing. In their plan they use many and various kinds of societies, which under their leadership promote neglect of Divine things and the breakdown of morality. This is because the Freemasons follow this principle above all: "Catholicism can be overcome not by logical arguments but by corrupted morals." And so they overwhelm the souls of men with the kind of literature and arts that will most easily destroy a sense of chaste morals, and foster sordid lifestyles in all phases of human life . . . To bring help to so many unhappy persons, to stabilize innocent hearts so that all can more easily go to the Immaculate Virgin through whom so many graces come down to us, the Militia Immaculatae was established in Rome in 1917.24



We can imagine what this Polish Knight of Our Lady would say today regarding the widespread promotion of immorality in television, movies, music and the arts; and we can ponder to what extent Freemasonry — which is truly an arm of Satan — has contributed and continues to contribute to the current state of affairs.



Gen. 3:15: The humble Woman who crushes Satan's proud head



St. Maximilian, the gentle Friar who lived the white crown of purity and received the red crown of martyrdom, clearly saw Gen. 3:15 as having both salvific and eschatological dimensions. This was one of his main reasons for founding the MI as a young seminarian in Rome in 1917. In God's almighty providence, it is no mere coincidence that Kolbe founded the MI in the same year that Our Lady appeared to the three little children, Lucia, Jacinta and Francisco, at Fatima, Portugal and revealed to them God's plan for world peace. "She will crush your head" should be read alongside Mary's own words at Fatima: "In the end, my Immaculate Heart will triumph"; for the ultimate triumph of Mary's Immaculate Heart involves the victory of the Immaculata — the All-Pure and Spotless Virgin whom the Evil One could never touch — over Satan and his minions.



In our Catholic Tradition, beginning with SS. Justin Martyr (+ 165), Irenaeus (+ 200), Epiphanius (+ 403) and Jerome (+ 420), Mary has been contrasted with Eve by phrases such as: "The knot of Eve's disobedience was untied by Mary's obedience"; and "Death through Eve, life through Mary,"25 Truly, Mary is the "New Eve."26 However, in light of the revelation in Gen. 3:15, can we not also say that in addition to viewing Eve in opposition to Mary, as her anti-type, that in God's salvific plan the Prince of Darkness should also be seen in opposition to Mary, even as another anti-type of Our Lady?27 Consider: Satan and Mary are both creatures. Both were endowed at their creation with abundant gifts: Lucifer was the most beautiful and intelligent of all the angels before his fall; Mary from the first moment of her Conception was Immaculate and Full of Grace. Satan was "a murderer from the beginning" (John 8:44); Mary is the "Mother of All the Living."28 Satan, the Tempter, deprived the human race of grace; Mary is the Mother in the Order of Grace. Satan is the "Father of Lies" (John 8:44); Mary is the "Destroyer of All Heresies."29 In the end, Satan's proud rebellion, "Non serviam" ("I will not serve"),30 will be overcome by Mary's humble obedience: "Behold, I am the handmaid of the Lord. May it be done to me according to your word" (Luke 1:38).31



The Church teaches that all the angels were created naturally good, and that prior to being admitted into the presence of God they were given a test of obedience.32 They failed that test by "radically and irrevocably" rejecting God and his reign,33 and as a result they are separated from God eternally.34 A tradition among Saints and theologians holds that in this test of obedience, the Incarnation was revealed to the angels, and that Satan along with a number of other angels rebelled, refusing to submit to the notion of having to worship him who would be both God and man, and as a result "fell like lightning from heaven" (Luke 10:18). Because his will is forever fixed in his rebellion,35he still refuses to believe that Jesus Christ is the Eternal Word made flesh and therefore must be worshipped and adored.



The opening scene in Mel Gibson's The Passion of the Christ takes place in the Garden of Gethsemane. Satan tries to tempt Christ by ridiculing the notion that he can redeem all men by his death. Then, under his breath, the Evil One contemptuously murmurs the following words: "Who is your father? . . . Who are you?" These words are significant, for they implicitly reveal the root of Satan's rebellion: a proud refusal to believe that Jesus is the Incarnate Word. We see analogous statements, revealing the same mentality, in the Gospels, when Satan tries to tempt Jesus: "If you are the Son of God, command that these stones become loaves of bread . . . Ifyou are the Son of God, throw yourself down [from the parapet of the Temple]" (Mt. 4:3, 6). Then Satan, after taking Jesus up atop a high mountain, shows Him "all the kingdoms in the world in their magnificence," and says: "All these I shall give to you, if you will prostrate yourself and worship me" (Matt. 4:8-9). The fact that Satan demands that Jesus worship him clearly reveals his refusal to believe that Jesus is both God and man.



Why did Satan refuse to submit to the revelation of the Eternal Word taking flesh? Perhaps it was because he, the most beautiful and intelligent of all the angels,36 thought it inconceivable that God should become man and take a nature even lower than his own. Satan would not serve because Satan refused to believe. We might say that the "Prince of this World" was the first rationalist: in pride, he refused to submit in mind and will to what his great (though finite) angelic intellect could not fully fathom: the deep mystery of the Incarnation; a union of two natures in one Divine Person. While Satan and the fallen angels who joined him believe in God — St. James tells us that "Even the demons believe . . . and tremble" (Jas. 2:19) — they refuse to believe that Jesus Christ is the Incarnate Word.



By contrast, Mary is the woman of faith. Her humble "Fiat" is an expression of her great faith, to which Elizabeth gives witness: "Blessed are you who believed that what was spoken to you by the Lord would be fulfilled" (Luke 1:45). What was that message which Mary believed? It was this: that she would "conceive in [her] womb and bear a son" who "will be called the Son of the Most High" and "will be called holy, the Son of God" (Luke 1:31-32, 35). Mary's faith in the great mystery of the Incarnation, and in God's ability to effect this incomprehensible event within her, was in part due to her great humility. As Mary herself says in the Magnificat, the Lord "hath regarded the humility of his handmaid" (Luke 1:47).37In God's salvific plan Mary, in her humility and her obedience in faith, is set in direct opposition to Satan's proud refusal to believe what God had revealed about His Son becoming man, and of his ongoing rebellion before God. In this sense the Evil Serpent is truly the anti-type of the spotless Virgin.



As a consequence of her great faith and her humble obedience to God's will, Mary became the Mother of God. And because of her perseverance in faith unto Calvary, she became the Mother of all the redeemed in the Order of Grace and now shares in her Son's victory on the Cross;38a victory which will culminate in the final defeat of the Prince of Darkness: "She will crush thy head" (Gen. 3:15).



Scripture reveals that "crushing the heads" of all evildoers is part of the definitive victory of Christ over his enemies. Psalm 74 [73] speaks of God, the "king from of old": "You smashed the heads of the dragons on the waters. You crushed the heads of Leviathan" (Ps. 74 [73]: 12-14). Psalm 110 [109] says that the Christ, both King in the line of David and High Priest in the order of Melchizedek, "crushes kings on the day of wrath"; He who is "robed in splendor, judges nations" and "crushes heads across the wide earth" (Ps. 110 [109]: 5-6).39 St. Paul promises that all who remain faithful and obedient to God will share in this activity; he says that if we are "wise to what is good and simple to what is evil, then the God of peace will quickly crush Satan under your feet" (Rom. 16:19-20).40 However, Mary, who is the Mother of Christ, and both Mother and "Eschatological Icon" of the Church,41 will be given a privileged place among Christ's faithful in this glorious triumph of Christ over the Father of Lies and all who follow him. This is the meaning of the "woman" in Gen. 3:15, of which the valiant woman, Jael, is a type, who crushed the head of the evil general Sisera, when he attacked God's Chosen People. In Deborah's canticle she praises Jael, saying "Blessed among women be Jael"; and then continues: "With her left hand she reached for the peg, with her right, for the workman's mallet. She hammered Sisera, crushed his head; she smashed, stove in his temple. At her feet he sank down, fell, lay still; down at her feet he sank and fell" (Judges 5:24, 26-27).42



Bl. Pius IX, in his Apostolic Constitution defining the Dogma of the Immaculate Conception, Ineffabilis Deus, gives us an authoritative interpretation of Gen. 3:15 when, after quoting this verse, he says: "the most holy Virgin, united with [her divine Son] by a most intimate and indissoluble bond, was, with him and through him, eternally at enmity with the evil serpent, and most completely triumphed over him, and thus crushed his head with her immaculate foot." Pope John Paul II echoes and expands on these words, saying:



the Immaculate Conception does not mean only an exaltation of Mary, as if she had been transported outside of all those who have received the inheritance of the sin of our first parents.On the contrary, it means her insertion into the very center of the spiritual combat, of this "enmity" that in the course of human history places the "Prince of Darkness" and the "Father of Lies" in opposition to the Woman and her seed.



Through the words of the Book of Genesis, we see Mary Immaculate in all the realism of her election. We see her at the culminating moment of this "enmity": at the foot of the Cross of Christ on Calvary. There "she will crush your head and you will strike her heel."43



In his own devotion to Mary and in founding the MI, St. Maximilian clearly saw Mary as actively engaged in the ongoing spiritual combat that is waged "not against flesh and blood, but against principalities and powers, against the rulers of the world of the is darkness, against the spirits of wickedness in the high places" (Eph. 6:12).44 The Martyr of Auschwitz also saw that in the end, this lowly Handmaid of the Lord, she who "cometh forth as the morning rising, fair as the moon, bright as the sun, terrible as an army set in battle array" (Song 6:9),45will be victorious and, through the power and grace of Christ, render a most humiliating defeat upon the Evil Serpent: she will crush his proud head, which will usher in the definitive Reign of Christ as our King, and Mary as our Queen, along with the triumph of her Immaculate Heart.



End Notes



1. Douay-Rheims trans. All other Scripture quotations will be taken from the New American Bible, unless otherwise noted.



2. Andre Frossard, Forget Not Love: The Passion of Maximilian Kolbe, trans. Cendrine Fontan (San Francisco: Ignatius Press, 1991), 23.



3. Scritti di Massimiliano Kolbe, Vol. I, no. 21, 36; in The MI in the Words of Its Founder, Vol. I: Selections from the Writings of St. Maximilian Maria Kolbe on the Militia Immaculatae, the Blessed Virgin Mary, and the General Topic of How One Lives the Life of an MI(unpublished work, undated, obtained from the Conventual Franciscan Friars of Marytown, Libertyville, Il.), 10; originally compiled by Fr. Bernard M. Geiger, OFM Conv.; additional editing by the Staff of the MI National Center (Libertyville, Il., USA).



4. Frossard, 68. In the above words we can see similarities between Kolbe's Marian consecration and that of de Montfort's, in light of the latter's notion of consecrating and entrusting everything to Mary; see, e.g., True Devotionnos. 121-25, 173.



5. Ibid., 109.



6. Fr. Luigi Faccenda, O.F.M. Conv., One More Gift: Total Consecration to the Immaculata According to the Spirituality of Saint Maximilian Kolbe(West Covina, California: Immaculata Press, 1990), 47.



7. God has revealed, through Scripture and Tradition, that Mary is our Mother in the Order of Grace; see CCC, nos. 967-970; quoting Lumen Gentiumnos. 61 & 62.



8. "Ratisbonne's Conversion — The MI's Inspiration," Immaculata(Jan./Feb. 1999), 17.



9. H. M. Manteau-Bonamy, O.P., Immaculatae Conception and the Holy Spirit, trans. Richard Arnandez, F.S.C. (Kenosha, Wisc.: Prow Books/Franciscan Marytown Press, 1977), 6, quoting from a Letter to Fr. Anthony Vivodaby Kolbe, April 4, 1933.



10. Ibid., 57; quoting from Final Sketchby St. Maximilian Kolbe, Feb. 17, 1941. Bonamy's book has been republished and is available from Ignatius Press.



11. Ibid., 4, quoting from Final Sketch.



12. Ibid., 2-3, quoting from Final Sketch. St. Thomas says the word "conceives" can be used in two ways in regard to the divine processions; first, as an act of the intellect where one "conceives" an idea, and this is the manner in which he describes the Eternal Word proceeding from the Father (Summa TheologicaI, Q. 27, a. 1 and a. 3); and second, as an act of the will, which he describes as "an impulse and movement toward an object" (S.T. I, Q. 27, a. 4). Thomas says "the procession of the will [of the Person of Love in the Trinity] is . . . by way of impulse and movement toward an object" (S.T., ibid.). Thomas does not give a proper name to this procession in the Trinity; Kolbe in essence does by calling the Holy Spirit the Uncreated, Eternal Immaculate Conception.



13. Ibid., 63.



14. Ibid., 91 quoting from Miles Immaculata, I, 1938, by Kolbe.



15. Ibid., 62.



16. True Devotion, no. 31.



17. Cf. Jn. 16:13-15: "When he, the Spirit of truth is come, he will teach you to all truth: for he shall not speak of himself, but what things soever he shall hear, he shall speak . . . He shall glorify me: because he shall receive of mine, and will declare it to you. All things whatsoever the Father hath are mine. Therefore I said, that he shall receive of mine and will declare it to you." Douay-Rheimstrans.



18. Cf. Catechism of the Catholic Church, 723: "Through the Holy Spirit, the Virgin conceives and gives birth to the Son of God. By the Holy Spirit's power and her faith, her virginity became uniquely fruitful."



19. Ibid., 91, quoting from Miles Immaculatae, I, by Kolbe, 1938 (emphasis added). Cf. CCC 968-70, 722-26.



20. St. Maximilian Kolbe, Conference given Sept. 25, 1937; in Manteau-Bonamy, 102.



21. St. Maximilian Kolbe, Address given Sept. 8, 1936, in Faccenda, 62.



22. Faccenda, 51-52; citing St. Maximilian Kolbe, Sketch, Dec. 1937, Gli Scritti di Massimiliano Kolbe, Eroe di Oswiecim e Beato della Chiesea, trans. Immaculata Press from materials compiled and trans. by Cristoforo Zambelli, 3 vols. (Florence: Critta di Vita, 1976-78), 3:776.



23. St. Maximilian Kolbe, "How the Militia of the Immaculata Began," Immaculata (Jan./Feb., 1999), 16: originally published in the Nov. 1935 issue of the Mugenzai no Seibo no Kishi, the Japanese Immaculatamagazine, commemorating the eighteenth anniversary of the MI.



24. Geiger, 8-9; originally published in Miles Immaculatae (July-Sept., 1939, No. 3 (7), 66-72, trans. Fr. Bernard M. Geiger, OFM Conv. Miles Immaculataewas the Latin magazine for priests which Kolbe began publishing in 1938, and the July-Sept. issue was the last issue published by Kolbe.



25. CCC 494.



26. CCC 726.



27. A "type" is "a biblical person, thing, action, or event that foreshadows new truths, new actions, or new events"; and "a likeness must exist between the type and the archetype, but the latter is always greater." Fr. John A. Hardon, S.J., Modern Catholic Dictionary(Garden City, N.Y.: Doubleday & Co., Inc., 1980), s.v., "Types, Scriptural."



28. CCC 494.



29. Bl. Pius IX, Ineffabilis Deus (The Immaculate Conception) (Dec. 8, 1854); Pope St. Pius X, Pascendi Dominici Gregis (Against the Modernists)(Sept. 8, 1907), no. 57.



30. Cf. Jer. 2:20: "I will not serve." In this verse Israel's refusal to serve the Lord is likened to Satan's proud rebellion.



31. Rev. 12 also reveals the opposition between Mary, "the Woman," and Satan, the "huge red dragon."



32. Cf. CCC 391-92.



33. CCC 392.



34. CCC 393.



35. Cf. CCC 392-93.



36. Cf. Is. 14:12-15: "How art thou fallen from heaven, O Lucifer, who didst rise in the morning: how art thou fallen to the earth, that didst wound the nations? And thou sadist in thy heart: I will ascend into heaven, I will exalt my throne above the stars of God . . . I will ascend above the height of the clouds, I will be like the Most High. But yet thou shalt be brought down to hell, into the depth of the pit." This is the Douay-Rheimstrans., which is based on St. Jerome's Latin Vulgate, which uses "Lucifer." The NAB substitutes "morning star" for Lucifer. The text here refers to Nebuchodnezzar, King of Babylon, though the Fathers apply the reference to Lucifer to Satan, the Prince of Devils, who was created beautiful but fell by pride, desiring to be "like the Most High" in his rebellion, as did Nebuchodnezzar.



37. Douay-Rheimstrans.



38. CCC 969-70.



39. Ps. 110:6, which speaks of Christ "crushing heads," may be unfamiliar to some — even priests and religious who read the Liturgy of the Hours, in which Ps. 110 is prayed every Sunday evening at Vespers. Unfortunately, those who revised the Hours after Vatican II chose to exclude this verse from the Psalm, which now appears as Ps. 110 [109]:1-5, 7. The exclusion of v. 6 partly empties Psalm 110 [109] of its eschatological content.



40. Pope St. Gregory the Great says: "We crush the serpent's head, when we extirpate from our heart the beginnings of temptation," Moralia in Iob, Liber I, 36; Corpus Christianorum Latina143, 55.



41. CCC 963; 972.



42. New American Bible trans. The Revised Standard Version is similar ". . . she struck Sis'era a blow, she crushed his head. . ." (v. 26). The Douay-Rheimshas a different rendering of v. 26, but with essentially the same meaning: ". . . she struck Sisera, seeking in his head a place for the wound, and strongly piercing his temples."



43. "The Synod projects the Council toward the third millennium," Homily of Pope John Paul II at the close of the Extraordinary Synod of Bishops, Dec. 8, 1985, in L'Osservatore Romano, Weekly Engl. Lang. Ed. (Dec. 16, 1985), 1-2.



44. Douay-Rheimstrans.



45. Douay-Rheimstrans.



Reverend Dwight P. Campbell is an S.T.D. Candidate at the International Marian Research Institute, University of Dayton, Ohio. A Chicago native, he earned his Juris Doctor from Loyola University of Chicago in 1981 and practiced law for four years as an Assistant State's Attorney in downstate Illinois before entering the seminary in 1986. Since his ordination in 1991 he has served in a number of parishes, and worked for two years as a high school chaplain. His last article in HPRappeared in October 2004.



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