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  1. Past hour
  2. News from two Trappist monasteries: 1. On June 13, 2026, Feast of the Immaculate Heart of Mary, Sister Marie Madeleine Beverly made solemn profession at the Mississippi Abbey (USA) in Iowa. 2. On June 13, 2026, Feast of the Immaculate Heart of Mary, Brother Kenneth Hessemer made solemn profession at the monastery of Spencer (United States) in Massachusetts.
  3. Today
  4. Nihil Obstat

    Hello friends

    Great to hear from you! In Alberta, grade 6 is actually the last year of elementary, and that's exactly what I like about it. They're developing the teenager attitude, but it's not fully formed yet. Developing mature personalities, and they still have a bit of the childhood innocence. It's a good balance for me. I may move to older grades later, but I'm not in a rush right now. I'm looking at the program offered by the University of Saskatchewan. https://grad.usask.ca/programs/scholarship-of-teaching-and-learning.php It's run entirely online, and from what I've heard and spoken to people about, they support your research really thoroughly.
  5. veritasluxmea

    Goodreads

    I don't mind, it's my actual name so I will see if I can send it by DM! I've heard of that series, it seems to be a popular pick. Do you like it? Currently I'm reading through the Reese's Book Club picks, I've read all the way back to her 2022 picks and am about to start Did You Hear About Kitty Karr? I kinda steered off the list and just finished The Magician's trilogy, I wasn't a huge fan of the first book yet found it engrossing and I liked the second one better and the third one even more. I used to read almost exclusively nonfiction and then back in college I got back into fiction and read nonfiction occasionally. One nonfiction pick I want to read is How to Not Know, it's a secular book but I think overlaps with Divine Providence and trust.
  6. veritasluxmea

    Hello friends

    Wow congrats on being a sponsor and your daughter's first communion!! And on starting a book! What do you like better about teaching 6th than elementary grades? I used to teach six and fifth but now teach a combined 3rd/4th classroom and love it. What university are you thinking of applying to?
  7. Nihil Obstat

    Hello friends

    I just noticed it's been two years since I posted last. I check the forum occasionally. Hello again, friends! I'm finishing up my third year teaching now. I taught grade 6 back in 23/24 when I posted last, then like I mentioned, I went to grade 4 for 24/25, and I was back to grade 6 (my preference at this point) for this school year. We did strike back in the fall. I was out of work for three weeks, and it was terrible. The strike itself was very unsuccessful, because the government used some very heavy-handed tactics to force us back to work (and formally remove some of our Charter rights), however public opinion has remained on our side, and we are slowly getting some of the things we were asking for. Next year I'm going to apply to start a master's degree. I'm really interested in doing a Master's of the Scholarship of Teaching and Learning (M.SoTL) - looks like a really neat program. Interdisciplinary, combining quality research and classroom practice at all levels. There are lots of good programs around, but that one is interesting me most at the moment. One of my students asked me to be her sponsor for confirmation this year. It was the proudest moment of my career so far. My oldest daughter had her First Communion just before Christmas, and my son is starting kindergarten next year. I also started writing a novel last spring. It is a horror novel for an older middle grade audience, around ten to thirteen. It's very slow going, as I usually have no energy left at the end of the day, but if I stick to a good schedule I might be able to finish the first draft this summer. No idea if it will be publishable when I finish, but it's a fun process regardless.
  8. Anastasia13

    Ban The Person Above You

    Banned for not hydrating the system.
  9. Yesterday
  10. CountrySteve937

    Goodreads

    Nice! What's your username on there (if you don't giving it out of course!)? I'm planning on making an account next time I have a day off work 😊 My home computer has my old Goodreads file on it. So, I can import it into my new account. What are you reading at the moment? :) a month or so ago I started reading an abridged edition of Gibbon's Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire (the modern library edition) and I only have a hundred pages left 🥳
  11. Last week
  12. veritasluxmea

    Goodreads

    I use is pretty regularly! Gives me an outlet to share my thoughts on books and see what others think. StoryGraph is a competitor which some people prefer, if you want options, but Goodreads has more users.
  13. Redwoods monastery is a small community - maybe 10 or 11 nuns - in northern California. They received a new novice in February, Sr. Angela Jonah. The link has pictures and several paragraphs by Sr. Angela. https://www.redwoodsabbey.org/news/welcome-sr-angela-jonah/
  14. In the Gospel we are able to identify some key aspects of Christian discipleship. As Jesus travelled around Palestine, he was moved by the need for hope and healing among those who thronged to him, those Matthew calls, “harassed” and “helpless.” In Hebrew and Aramaic, the two languages familiar to Jesus, the word for compassion was found in the term for ‘womb.’ This means compassion for Jesus (and his Jewish contemporaries) was not felt in one’s head but in one’s heart. It is with this concern that he called his disciples and sent them out to proclaim that God’s reign was near, to heal, restore, cleanse, and liberate those to whom they were sent. He also reminded them that they would face and endure hatred, betrayal, opposition, and arrest, and yet endure all this with the help of God. What does this mission offered by Jesus mean for us today? To begin with, we are able to see that discipleship is a calling. Just as Jesus chose his twelve disciples in the gospel passage, Christ has called us and we follow him. It is only because God in Christ felt compassion according to the Gospels toward us that we have been called as the Church, the Greek word for Church – “ecclesia” – is composed of the words “ek,” meaning “out,” and “kaleo,” meaning “called.” We can say that discipleship is an outcome of God reaching out to make us his own. As disciples, we only respond to his calling and continue the work of Christ, always with his help. The words of Jesus to his first disciples, “Follow me,” continues to echo in and through the Church throughout history. However, the call to be a disciple is never about the disciples themselves. Christian discipleship is always about engaging with and living for others. The chosen disciples are sent out to proclaim the Good News of the kingdom and share God’s healing and liberation with others. This is why the Church, as the community of disciples, is also sent out into the world. A former Archbishop of Canterbury William Temple wisely noted, the Church always exists for its non-members. The Church, while it should certainly be a mutually comforting and loving fellowship of God’s children, cannot become self-centred or inward facing. The Church is a proclaiming community of disciples, in word and deed, to make a difference in the world. Discipleship and mission go hand in hand. Without mission, the Church loses its meaning and purpose of existence. Disciples go out to make more disciples – not for the sake of increasing numbers in the pews – but because God’s compassion moves within us. We may ask here: Is discipleship always a life of reaching out to others? Do we always have to keep proclaiming and sharing God’s gifts with others? Jesus gently reminds his disciples that they should also be willing to receive. They should be humble to receive help and support from others. Elsewhere, in Mark’s gospel, Jesus instructs his disciples to eat what is offered to them and stay where they are received. There is mutual care and compassion as disciples engage in mission. Connecting this with Christian discipleship, we may say that one cannot give without being open and humble to receive. When we engage with others in mission, Christ encourages us to receive as well. In other words, disciples are to be open to listening and learning from those to whom they are sent. Making disciples is not about patronizing. Rather, it is leading a life of humility, openness, receiving, and genuine dialogue. Finally, we can be proud of our calling as disciples, but we cannot forget that it is always a risk-taking business. Those who follow Jesus, because they strive for peace and justice, often find themselves in trouble with the powers of the world. Yet, we are never alone. The Holy Spirit, the Spirit of Christ, is with us and speaks through us. No matter who we may face or what our circumstances might be, we know that the Holy Spirit works through us. After all, it is God who has called and sent us in the first place. May we, as the Church whose head is Christ Jesus, continue to be mindful that we have been called as his disciples by the grace of God. May we remember that we are sent, filled with compassion, to “go out and make disciples,” boldly proclaiming the Good News of God’s kingdom in a broken world.
  15. St. Gregory's Abbey in Shawnee, OK posted the following announcement on their Facebook page on 12 June. Highlights are mine: "Abbot Lawrence clothed Postulant Chien Ngo as a novice today, Friday, June 12, the Solemnity of the Sacred Heart. The clothing ceremony took place in the presence of the monastic community in the monastery Chapter Room. In keeping with ancient tradition, Abbot Lawrence conferred a new name as sign of the new way of life one assumes in the novitiate. Postulant Chien now is known as Brother Novice John Cassian. Born in Vietnam, Br. Nov. Cassian immigrated to the United States with his family when he was around ten years old. The family settled in the Dallas – Ft. Worth area, where he was living until beginning his time as a postulant at St. Gregorys. He holds a bachelors degree in Business Administration and for a time was a seminarian for the Diocese of Austin. The novitiate lasts one year. Novices experience an intense period of formation during the year, including courses on monastic spirituality, scripture, community history and personal development. They also engage in the daily liturgical prayer of the community, manual labor and other aspects of the fraternal life of the monastery. Br. Nov, Cassian joins Br. Nov. Sebastian and Br. Novice Isaac who are scheduled to complete their novitiate year at the beginning of September." This community had struggled with a lack of vocations and an aging group of monks. But then about fifteen years ago, they started getting a new monk just every now and then. Now, with the two novices about to profess first vows and the new novice, they have eight younger monks in a community of nineteen. So - praise God! - the community seems to be renewing itself.
  16. Luigi

    They Hung Up on Pope Leo!

    I don't know how long ago she posted this blog, but here's Jen Fulwiler's take on the the event. https://www.facebook.com/reel/975534228658186
  17. Didacus

    Rosary - Let's Pray It.

    L2.6 Je vous salut Marie, pleine de grace, le Seigneur est avec vous, vous etes benie entre toutes les femmes et Jesus, le fruit de vos entrailles est beni. Sainte Marie, Mere de Dieu, priez pour nous pecheurs, maintenant et a l'heure de notre mort. Amen
  18. Didacus

    Ban The Person Above You

    Banned for feeding the system!
  19. Luigi

    New convert?

    Most excellent! Let us know if there's anything we can do. Perhaps offer him a FREE subscription to Phatmass, where he can ask questions and get definitive answers from our excellent panel of experts!
  20. Anastasia13

    New convert?

    supposedly he will start class in September and be Catholic at Easter.
  21. Earlier
  22. dUSt

    The good life

  23. dUSt

    Ban The Person Above You

    Banned for taking 3 months to reply to the last ban.
  24. dUSt

    New convert?

  25. CountrySteve937

    Ban The Person Above You

    Banned for thinking too little!
  26. Didacus

    Rosary - Let's Pray It.

    L2.5 Je vous salut Marie, pleine de grace, le Seigneur est avec vous, vous etes benie entres toutes les femmes et Jesus, le fruit de vos entrailles est beni. Sainte Marie, Mere de Dieu, priez pour nous pecheurs, maintenant et a l'heure de notre mort. Amen (pour les ames au purgatoire: y inclus Troy)
  27. cappie

    Corpus Christi A

    The Holy Eucharist is a meal. On one level, it’s a simple meal of bread and wine. But with prayers and the Holy Spirit, with faith, it is the Sacrament of the Body and Blood of Christ. It can take us back—back perhaps to our very first communion. It can bring back memories of other churches, other altars, other fellow-believers. But it is more than that. This is what makes a Catholic understanding of the Eucharist slightly different from some other perspectives. The Eucharist, this sacred meal of the Body and Blood of Christ by any name—is more than a memorial. The Eucharist takes us back, yes, in history and memory. But the Eucharist also grounds us in the present. And even more amazing, the Eucharist puts us in the future, where we eat and drink with the saints and martyrs, the angels and archangels, the fellow believers of all time and place. In the teaching on the Holy Eucharist, there’s a wonderful part that talks about the benefits of what we do, the benefits of Holy Communion, the Holy Eucharist, the Lord’s Supper. It says simply, “The benefits we receive are the forgiveness of our sins, the strengthening of our union with Christ and one another, and the foretaste of the heavenly banquet which is our nourishment in eternal life.” The “forgiveness of our sins” has to do with the past. I think it’s a complete misunderstanding to think that we have to be completely clean and sinless in order to receive Holy Communion. Pope Francis told us that “the Eucharist is not a prize for the perfect, but medicine and nourishment for the weak!” In saying this he is not suggesting we should go to the Eucharist without thoughtfulness, prayer and presence of mind; but he is also reminding us that all of us, without exception, come to the Eucharist as sinners in need of God’s healing grace and mercy. Pope Francis also provides guidelines for how the Eucharist should make a real difference in our lives and relationships with others. First, he says, we need to relate to people, sharing in their joys, hopes, sorrows and sufferings. Furthermore, this should enable us to reach out to the poor, sick and marginalised people, seeing in them the face of Christ. Second, experiencing God’s forgiveness in the Eucharist should enable us to see ourselves as “forgiven sinners” who are empowered to reach out in forgiveness to others. In this way the Eucharist enables us to overcome pride and division. When we partake of the Body and Blood of Christ, we are forgiven. We are forgiven again. Our sins are washed away at Baptism, but the ongoing accumulation of sin in our life meets its match in Holy Communion. Ignatius of Antioch called it the “medicine of immortality, and the antidote to prevent us from dying, … that we should live for ever in Jesus Christ.” Through the forgiveness of sins the Eucharist recalls the past and wipes the slate clean. The Eucharist is the ultimate palate cleanser. But the second benefit according to the Catechism sets us down squarely in the present. It has to do with strengthening our union with Christ and with one another. In a world that often suggests we live only for ourselves, that we protect at all costs what we think is ours; the unifying work of the Blessed Sacrament is counter-cultural. But it is live-giving. In Communion we are reminded that we need each other. The common cup and common bread underscore that we are not so different from one another, after all. Barriers of race and class and education, differences of national origin are all dissolved in the common chalice. Pope Francis adds Third, the Eucharist should enable us to become active disciples of Jesus Christ. While we Christians do not claim to be better than others, we nonetheless recognise our particular mission is to make Christ known and loved through a spirit of prayer, action and care for all our brothers and sisters, most especially those in need. In the words of Anglo-Catholic poet TS Eliot, Christ is “the still point of the turning world.” It is especially through our celebration of the Eucharist that our distracted, busy, turning worlds are stilled by the overpowering, silent mystery that camouflages the saving, liberating, loving presence of Christ in the broken bread and sweetened wine. For He is indeed truly present among us as the very life of the world. And so, grateful for the redemption of the past, thankful for the mystery of the moment, and glad for the hope that is ours, we celebrate this feast of bread and wine, of Body and of Blood.
  28. Didacus

    The good life

    That's what winning looks like! Cheers!!!
  29. Didacus

    Rosary - Let's Pray It.

    L2.4 Je vous salut Marie, pleine de grace, le Seigneur est avec vous, vous etes benie entres toutes les femmes et Jesus, le fruit de vos entrailles est beni. Sainte Marie, Mere de Dieu, priez pour nous pecheurs, maintenant et a l'heure de notre mort. Amen
  30. chrysostom

    The good life

    I hope so! We are keeping boy/girl a surprise to everyone including ourselves. Just felt the kicking myself yesterday for the first time.
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