Synod Reaffirms Celibate Priesthood
It’s nice to see the Bishops affirm celibacy for the priesthood. See the story in the Washington Post.
The Synod is over and I’m sure we’ll see and hear more news from it as time goes on.
It’s nice to see the Bishops affirm celibacy for the priesthood. See the story in the Washington Post.
The Synod is over and I’m sure we’ll see and hear more news from it as time goes on.
It’s a beautiful day here in central Missouri. The kind that makes you just thank God for the beauty of His creation!
Today is World Food Day. Not something that many people seem to pay attention to but after having been to the ceremonies and spent a week with the people at the Food & Agriculture Organization of the United Nations I know there are a lot of people there who are truly concerned about relieving world hunger. Unfortunately some of them think the way to do that is to reduce population and they’re determined to make sure that abortion and contraception is pushed on the poor of the world. Very misguided people I’m afraid.
However, hunger is a reality, even here in America, the land of plenty. We have so much we take for granted. I wish everyone could travel to at least one other country and get some “perspective.” As we eat our abundant and wonderful food there are many, many starving. Let’s use today for what I think it really means and thank God for what we have and contemplate how we can help others who don’t.
The Prelate of Opus Dei, Bishop Javier EchevarrÃa, has written a new book titled, “Eucharist and Christian Life.” So far it’s only available in spanish but there are some excerpts on the Opus Dei website like this one:
“Behold our Godâ€
Christianity is God’s nearness to man. It is a close friendship and an intimate relationship between God and man. It expresses the familiarity of a beloved son welcomed with indescribable joy, music, celebration and a great banquet (cf. Lk 15: 22-24). This reality of an especially spiritual content also has a sensible dimension which finds its fulcrum in the flesh of Christ.
“The Word was made fleshâ€, writes St. John (Jn. 1: 14), thus summarising the plan of salvation that the Father had fixed by means of his Word. The nearness of God does not only mean that he moves and governs everything. It is not an Alliance limited only to a legal pact of which are conserved some paper documents as testimony. It rather brings with it a personal closeness that has made itself sensible and tangible. The Son of God has assumed our nature and thenceforth in the words of Tertulian, “the flesh is the hinge of salvationâ€.
The book is being published by Rialp Publishing in Madrid.
There’s an excellent article written by Rev. Michael Giesler, Wespine Study Center, St. Louis, MO in the July/August issue of Crisis magazine on mortification, “The Body’s Forgotten ally: A Brief Defense of Corporal Mortification.” So good in fact that a writer in the St. Louis Post-Dispatch mentioned it in another article he’s written about Opus Dei. I guess he’s doing a series.
I find it interesting that so many people still try to find something sensational and lurid about Opus Dei. That’s why it’s nice to see a reporter come out with an article like this one in the London Times Online, “A wholesome reality shines beyond the dark conspiracy.”
It’s written by a woman who makes some very good points. It appears that the reality of Opus Dei is much more “normal” than some people would like us to believe. I say, “duh.” Read the founder’s writings to find out why.
Boy the path to holiness was a tough one this past week. I was working from a hotel room in another state all week and there wasn’t a convenient Mass to attend so I missed several days. That’s like not working out physically to me. Something is missing from the day! I tried to make the fact that I couldn’t attend Mass on those days an offering since it did seem like mortification to just work and not take the time to find a church with a Mass.
I wonder if this happens to other people who travel a lot. Do you find it hard to attend Mass? I usually don’t. This was a slightly unusual situation and one I think I could have planned ahead for a little better.
There’s a pretty good story on Opus Dei in the St. Louis Post-Dispatch from yesterday titled “Opus Dei is unique in Catholic world.” The writer interviewed local cooperators and members of the Wespine Study Center.
The International Herald Tribune isn’t a paper I would normally expect to see Opus Dei mentioned in but this is interesting. It’s a story about 2 TV Networks (ABC and CBS) working on mini-series of the life of Pope John Paul II. In the article Opus Dei is mentioned starting on page 2 as they talk about where support has come from for at least one of the projects.
This website simply titled, “Josemaria Escriva,” is set up and run by the Studium Foundation, which “was established in Madrid on April 6, 2000. Its purpose is to promote “the publication and dissemination on a not-for-profit basis of literary works that contribute to the Christian and human education of persons, as well as to promote or participate in cultural activities that have the same character.” The Foundation administers the rights to St. Josemaria’s writings as well as other books.
On this site you’ll find links to the Opus Dei founder’s books in english like “The Way.”
This is a great reference site and one to bookmark!
On August 30 a statue of St. Josemaria Escriva was placed just outside St. Peter’s Basilica in Rome.
The statue is located in an exterior niche of the Basilica alongside other sculptures of the same dimension: St. Teresa of the Andes, St. Marcelino Champagnat, St. Gregory of Armenia, etc. John Paul II intended that the niches in this area of the Basilica be occupied by saints and founders of our time.
In 2002 the same Italian artist, Romano Cosci, sculpted a figure of St. Josefa of the Heart of Jesus, foundress of the Handmaids of Jesus, which has also been placed in the Vatican.
Cosci works from his studio in Pietrasanta, a town in northern Italy. Shortly after the statue of St. Josemaria was placed in its niche, he declared: “This has been a great year; we have worked with intensity in order to complete a difficult project: the sculpture of a saint. Ordinarily it is difficult for an artist to be completely satisfied with his work. My intention is to please the faithful who view it, recognizing in it the figure of a priest who wanted to fulfill the will of God in everything.”
Welcome to PathToHoliness, a weblog dedicated to Opus Dei and spreading the word that our path to holiness can and should take place in our everyday life and throught the santification of our work. We’ll follow the writings and path laid out by the founder, shown here, of Opus Dei, St. Josemaria Escriva.
This is my first post. Much more to come.