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Stressed out? Pray this prayer to be freed from needless anxiety and worry

St. Frances Xavier Cabrini has just the prayer for you!

 

 

According to the Anxiety and Depression Association of America, “Anxiety disorders are the most common mental illness in the U.S., affecting 40 million adults in the United States age 18 and older, or 18.1% of the population every year.” Some of us suffer from one or more of these crippling anxiety disorders, while many of us may simply feel “stressed out” from everything that is happening in our lives. Either way, it is a reality we face every day and is often very difficult to overcome.Besides having recourse to proper medical attention, prayer can also be a strong aid against stress and anxiety. Below is a powerful prayer from St. Frances Xavier Cabrini that invokes God’s help in being freed from “all needless anxiety, solicitude and worry.” Something our hearts all long for and desire!

 

Fortify me with the grace of your Holy Spirit and give your peace to

my soul that I may be free from all needless anxiety, solicitude and

worry. Help me to desire always that which is pleasing and acceptable

to you so that your Will may be my will. Grant that I may rid myself of

all unholy desires and that, for your love, I may remain obscure and

unknown in this world, to be known only to you. Do not permit me to

attribute to myself the good that you perform in me and through me,

but rather, referring all honor to your Majesty, may I glory only in my

infirmities, so that renouncing sincerely all vainglory which comes

from the world, I may aspire to that true and lasting glory which

comes from you.

Amen.

PRAYER FOR THIS MORNING (SUNDAY, OCTOBER 11)

Twenty-Eighth Sunday in Ordinary Time

Prayer for the Morning

 

The Lord will give us our daily bread:

come, let us adore!

 

Glory to the Father, and to the Son,

and to the Holy Spirit, as it was in the beginning,

is now, and will be for ever. Amen. Alleluia!

 

HYMN

 

Lord Jesus, here you led us

Within your holiest place,

And here yourself have fed us

With treasures of your grace,

And you have freely given

What earth could never buy,

The bread of life from heaven,

That we may never die.

 

You gave us all we wanted:

This food can death destroy;

And you have freely granted

The cup of endless joy.

O Lord, we do not merit

The favor you have shown,

And all our soul and spirit,

Bow down before your throne.

 

CANTICLE (Revelation 2:7, 17, 26; 3:5, 12, 21)

 

The Lord will destroy death forever. (cf. Is 25:8)

 

Through the mystery of Jesus Christ’s Death and Resurrection, God has destroyed death for ever by transforming it from the end of our story to a passageway into eternal life. In the Eucharistic feast, we taste the promise of life fulfilled.

 

To the victor I will give the right to eat from the tree of life

that is in the garden of God.

 

To the victor I shall give some of the hidden manna;

I shall also give a white amulet upon which is inscribed a new name,

which no one knows except the one who receives it.

To the victor, who keeps to my ways until the end,

I will give authority over the nations.

 

The victor will be dressed in white,

and I will never erase his name from the book of life

but will acknowledge his name

in the presence of my Father and of his angels.

 

The victor I will make into a pillar in the temple of my God,

and he will never leave it again.

On him I will inscribe the name of my God

and the name of the city of my God, the new Jerusalem,

which comes down out of heaven from my God,

as well as my new name.

 

I will give the victor the right to sit with me on my throne,

as I myself first won the victory and sit with my Father on his throne.

 

Word of God (John 6:48-51)

 

I am the bread of life. Your ancestors ate the manna in the desert, but they died; this is the bread that comes down from heaven so that one may eat it and not die. I am the living bread that came down from heaven; whoever eats this bread will live forever; and the bread that I will give is my flesh for the life of the world.

 

Israel I would feed with finest wheat/ and fill them

with honey from the rock. (Ps 81:17)

 

CANTICLE OF ZECHARIAH

 

My soul shall be filled as with a banquet,/ my mouth shall praise you with joy. (Ps 63:6)

 

Blessed be the Lord, the God of Israel;

he has come to his people and set them free.

He has raised up for us a mighty savior,

born of the house of his servant David.

 

Through his holy prophets he promised of old

that he would save us from our enemies,

from the hands of all who hate us.

 

He promised to show mercy to our fathers

and to remember his holy covenant.

 

This was the oath he swore to our father Abraham:

to set us free from the hands of our enemies,

free to worship him without fear,

holy and righteous in his sight

all the days of our life.

 

You, my child, shall be called the prophet

of the Most High;

for you will go before the Lord to prepare his way,

to give his people knowledge of salvation

by the forgiveness of their sins.

 

In the tender compassion of our God

the dawn from on high shall break upon us,

to shine on those who dwell in darkness

and the shadow of death,

and to guide our feet into the way of peace.

 

Glory to the Father…

 

INTERCESSIONS

 

God feeds us with the finest wheat: our Lord Jesus Christ, source of our life. With joy let us pray:

 

R/Lord, give us new life!

 

You feed us at the table of your Word:

– nourish the thoughts of our heart: R/

 

You feed us with the Bread of life:

– grant that we may live in the spirit of self-giving

love: R/

 

You feed us with the pledge of eternal life:

– grant that we may receive our daily bread with gratitude. R/

 

(Personal intentions)

 

Our Father….

 

God of life, you invite all peoples to the feast of life in your Kingdom. Forgive us when, in our foolishness, we refuse your invitation to pursue other interests, and bring us back to your table, that we may continue to grow in the life of Jesus Christ, your Son and our Lord, for ever. Amen.

Meditate on God’s presence after communion

Do you stop to realize that the God of the universe is inside you at communion?

 

 

Often the familiarity with attending Mass and receiving holy communion can make us indifferent to what is truly happening.As Catholics, we believe that Jesus himself is present in the Eucharist in a unique way. His entire body, blood, soul and divinity is there in the consecrated host and when we receive communion, we are receiving the God of the universe into our hearts.

 

Do we ever stop to meditate on that profound truth?

 

Mother Mary Loyola in her book, Welcome! Holy Communion, provides a brief meditation on this reality that can help awaken in us an awe at what is happening at Mass. Sometimes we need a little “poke” to see the divine mysteries that occur and to understand who is coming inside us at communion.

 

How near I am now, nay, how closely united I am now, to the Source

of all good. I cross my hands upon my breast and know that, folded

there, is all good.

 

And He is here to share with me, like a true lover, all that He has and

is. Within my breast is:

All His Omnipotence to protect me—”Thou shalt know that the Lord

thy God is a strong and faithful God” (Deut. vii.).

 

All His Wisdom to guide me—”Abide thou with Me, tear not” (i Kings

xxii.).

 

All His loving-kindness to help me—” I will not leave thee nor forsake

thee” (Jos. i.).

 

All His charity to warm me—” Our God is a consuming fire” (Heb. xii.).

 

All His zeal to enkindle mine, for “The charity of Christ presseth us” (2

Cor. v.).

 

All His treasures to enrich me, for “He that spared not even His own

Son…how hath He not also with Him given us all things!” (Rom. viii.).

 

All His merits to plead for me—”Ever living to make intercession for

us” (Heb. vii.).

 

How near to me is all this in the supremely precious moments after

Communion! Not at my door, not within my reach, but

absolutely within my breast. Open, then, Thy hand to me, O Lord,

and fill Thy needy creature with benediction by filling it with Thyself.

“Keep the crucifix before your eyes, and it will teach you everything…”

Seeking reassurance, finding peace in the Cross of Christ

 

 

Q:“Why should I consider Catholicism?”

A: “Because you’re going to suffer. In life, everyone suffers. Absolutely no one escapes their turn at it. And Catholicism has the most complete theology of suffering, injustice and pain. Which is why she is the only church to process through this spiritual battleground upon which we walk, every day, behind a crucifix.”

 

When people tell me they are anxious or despairing, or that they are feeling too alone, my advice is very simple. I tell them, “Get a crucifix.”

 

Not a cross, a crucifix. Get a small one that can be kept discreetly at your desk. Get an even smaller one for your pocket, to carry with you. Get one for your home.

 

Keep the crucifix before your eyes, and it will teach you everything. It will train you to take a “long view” of things.

 

The earthly goings-on that make us anxious and full of despair are a manifestation of the wholly spiritual war that proceeds apace—continually, though unseen—all around us. When we buy into it and lose hope, we are opening ourselves up to a spiritual oppression meant to cast us into the darkness and away from the light. Because the main battle is supernatural, we recognize it in our spirit; we feel it in our spirit, and then, when the oppression is too great, we either try to numb ourselves to it or we allow our spirits, and our faith, to collapse completely.

 

Better to arm the spirit. Feed it through Eucharistic adoration and Holy Communion; strengthen it with the sacramental grace of confession, so that regardless of what happens, despair never enters into the equation, never enters into you—because you understand that God’s hand is still part of things, that we are never abandoned; so much of what is spinning past, over headlines and through the ether is illusion or purposeful distraction, and if the rest is real, it is nothing to be afraid of, because we have been told that he is with us, to the end of all things.

 

So if you do not have a crucifix, get one; get a couple of them, and have them blessed. Then study them. Take a long, hard look at what is before your eyes. Ask God to show you what you need to know. Ask for what Solomon asked for: an understanding heart.

While looking, realize that everything you are feeling, all the things that are weighing on you—old wounds or new ones, vulnerabilities, disappointments, injustices, betrayals, mockeries, even hunger and thirst—have been experienced by Christ Jesus; he has known it all, borne it all, suffers with you and for you and permits you to join in his sacrifice—and thus his victory.

 

Ask Mary to teach you what she knows too, what she learned while she stood beneath the reality of it. Ask the Blessed Mother to explain about taking the “long view” of things, about keeping the faith even when one does not understand why things happen as they do; about how sometimes what is horrifying and unjust must happen, if something else—something remarkable and unimaginable and precisely what is required—is to be able to happen.

 

While you are meditating, it’s very possible that you will be tempted to distraction—that what the monks call “bad thoughts” may happen: sinful thoughts, anxious thoughts. When they arrive, follow Saint Benedict of Nursia’s instruction in his Holy Rule: “When evil thoughts come into one’s heart, dash them at once against Christ, the Rock”—imagine yourself crashing them against the crucifix, and they shatter.

 

Try it and you will see it’s true; you’ll be amazed at how calmly you’ll be able to observe the world and its goings-on, the illusions and the realities and the distractions in between, with a new and authentic sense of peace, if you keep the sacraments in your life and your eyes on the crucifix.

 

On a retreat one year, after meditating on the crucifix over the course of a day, I scrawled this in my notebook:

 

“Everything” is about nothing.

Everything ended with the sacrifice of the Lamb.

All is consummated.

We are forever and always at the Last Supper, at the Crucifixion, at the

Resurrection.

Time ended with the tearing of the veil and the rolling back of the

stone.

 

The rest is illusion and catching up.

There is nothing to be afraid of.

 

The upright crucifix teaches us balance because it helps us to become centered on Christ. We are not alone—even if we have run away, like the apostles, or denied him, like Peter (to whom he gave the keys to the kingdom); even if we have believed the great lie that we are unlovable because of our sins. Christ is with us, and he is the God Who Knows. He knows exactly what it is to be anxious and afraid, to wish circumstances were different and cups could be passed by; to feel unloved by those who should have known him best. He knows.

 

I sometimes think guilt and self-loathing is the “default mode” for too many of us, and I certainly carry my share, and yet when I concentrate on the crucifix, I feel only known—fully, wholly known—by the One whom I have come to understand is All Love. And so guilt and self-loathing have no hold there. There is only a deep wellspring of consolation.

 

Look closely, and consider the letters above him: I.N.R.I.

 

Intimate. Near. Reassuring. Instructive.

Prayer for the conversion of a loved one

Sometimes all we can do for the conversion of a loved one is to pray and entrust them to God.

 

For various reasons, people we know and love will either walk away from the Catholic faith, or have never been given the fullness of the truth in the first place. In either case, our hearts might ache that this person has not embraced the saving power of Jesus’ love and compassion.

 

While we should do all that we can to provide an inspiring example for them to follow, sometimes all we can do is pray and hope that God will lead them home.

 

Here is a prayer from a manual of prayers published in 1851 that beautifully represents our desires and cries out to God for help.

 

O divine and adorable Savior, thou who art the way, the truth, and the

life, I beseech thee to have mercy upon N., and bring him [or her] to

the knowledge and love of thy truth. Thou, O Lord, knowest all his

darkness, his weakness, and his doubts: have pity upon him, O

merciful Savior; let the bright beams of thy eternal truth shine upon

his mind; clear away the cloud of error and prejudice from before his

eyes, and may he humbly submit to and embrace with his whole heart

the teaching of thy Church. Oh, let not the soul for whom I pray be

shut out from thy blessed fold! Unite him to thyself in the sacraments

of thy love, and grant that, partaking of the blessings of thy grace in

this life, he may come at last to the possession of those eternal rewards

which thou hast promised to all those who believe in thee and who do

thy will. Hear this my petition, O merciful Jesus, who, with the Father

and the Holy Spirit, livest and reignest ever and ever.

Amen.

PRAYER FOR THIS EVENING (SATURDAY, OCTOBER 10)

Prayer for the Evening

Vigil of the Twenty-Eighth Sunday in Ordinary Time

 

God has prepared a banquet for us:

let us give thanks and praise!

 

Glory to the Father, and to the Son,

and to the Holy Spirit, as it was in the beginning,

is now, and will be for ever. Amen. Alleluia!

 

HYMN

 

Jesus, Priest and Victim

For our ransom given,

Sent us by the Father

As a Gift from heaven;

Purchasing salvation

Once on Calvary,

Thou still bidest with us

In this mystery.

 

Here, thyself thou givest

As a living Food

E’en thy very Godhead

With thy Flesh and Blood.

Thou hast bid us gladly

Of this Bread partake,

That thou mayest fill us

With thy life and grace.

 

Oh, we beg thee, Jesus,

Ever be our Bread,

That our hearts’ deep hunger

By thee may be fed.

May this pledge of glory

In thy goodness given

Lead us to behold thee

In the bliss of heaven.

 

PSALM 111

 

Behold, I have prepared my banquet. (Mt 22:4)

 

On Sunday especially, the Lord invites us to the Eucharistic feast that anticipates the wedding feast of heaven. Wisdom urges us to accept the invitation. Let us hasten to the table with joy.

 

I will thank the Lord with all my heart

in the meeting of the just and their assembly.

Great are the works of the Lord;

to be pondered by all who love them.

 

Majestic and glorious his work,

his justice stands firm for ever.

He makes us remember his wonders.

The Lord is compassion and love.

 

He gives food to those who fear him;

keeps his covenant ever in mind.

He has shown his might to his people

by giving them the lands of the nations.

 

His works are justice and truth:

his precepts are all of them sure,

standing firm for ever and ever:

they are made in uprightness and truth.

 

He has sent deliverance to his people

and established his covenant for ever.

Holy his name, to be feared.

 

To fear the Lord is the first stage of wisdom;

all who do so prove themselves wise.

His praise shall last for ever!

 

Glory to the Father….

 

Word of God (Proverbs 9:1-5)

 

Wisdom has built her house,/ she has set up her seven columns;/ She has dressed her meat, mixed her wine,/ yes, she has spread her table./ She has sent out her maidens; she calls/ from the heights out over the city:/ “Let whoever is simple turn in here;/ to him who lacks understanding, I say,/ Come, eat of my food,/ and drink of the wine I have mixed!”

 

Blessed are those called to the supper of the Lamb!

(Order of Mass)

 

CANTICLE OF MARY

 

Come to the feast! (cf. Mt 22:4)

 

My soul proclaims the greatness of the Lord,

my spirit rejoices in God my Savior

for he has looked with favor on his lowly servant.

 

From this day all generations will call me blessed:

the Almighty has done great things for me,

and holy is his Name.

 

He has mercy on those who fear him

in every generation.

 

He has shown the strength of his arm,

he has scattered the proud in their conceit.

 

He has cast down the mighty from their thrones,

and has lifted up the lowly.

 

He has filled the hungry with good things,

and the rich he has sent away empty.

 

He has come to the help of his servant Israel

for he has remembered his promise of mercy,

the promise he made to our fathers,

to Abraham and his children for ever.

 

Glory to the Father…

 

INTERCESSIONS

 

Rich is the banquet God’s love has prepared for us. In gratitude, let us pray:

 

R/Your praise shall last for ever!

 

Giver of all good gifts,

– give us the Bread of life. R/

 

Father of the poor,

– admit us to the wedding feast of heaven. R/

 

Source of all good,

– prepare us for the feast of everlasting life. R/

 

(Personal intentions)

 

Our Father….

 

May we so live in this world that we may feast at the wedding table of the Lamb in the heavenly Jerusalem. Amen.

 

MARIAN ANTIPHON

 

Antiphon for the Memorial of

Our Lady of the Rosary,

October 7

 

The daughters of Zion saw her flourishing

in blossoms of roses,

and pronounced her most blessed.

 

 

Salve, Regina, mater misericordiae;

vita, dulcedo, et spes nostra, salve.

Ad te clamamus, exsules filii Evae.

Ad te suspiramus, gementes et flentes

in hac lacrimarum valle.

 

Eia ergo, advocata nostra,

illos tuos misericordes oculos

ad nos converte.

Et Iesum, benedictum fructum ventris tui,

nobis post hoc exsilium ostende.

O clemens, O pia, O dulcis Virgo Maria.

 

 

Hail, holy Queen, mother of mercy,

our life, our sweetness, and our hope.

To you do we cry,

poor banished children of Eve.

To you do we send up our sighs,

mourning and weeping in this valley of tears.

Turn then, O most gracious advocate,

your eyes of mercy toward us,

and after this our exile

show unto us the blessed fruit of your womb, Jesus.

O clement, O loving, O sweet Virgin Mary.

 

V/ Pray for us, O holy Mother of God,

R/ That we may be made worthy of the promises of Christ.

5 Quotes to Inspire Your Devotion to the Sacred Heart of Jesus

Jesus’ own large heart is aflame, but never consumed

 

 

On June 16, 1675, in an appearance to Sister Margaret Mary Alacoque, Jesus declared that she was to establish in the Church a special day of devotion to His Sacred Heart. It was to be the first Friday after the octave of the Blessed Sacrament, which falls in June. With the help of her confessor, Father de la Colombiere, the Sacred Heart devotion was officially proclaimed by the Church some years later. This year, the feast of the Sacred Heart of Jesus is on Friday, June 12.Jesus had appeared before to Margaret Mary but on June 16, 1675, He revealed that He wanted her to promote a special devotion to His Sacred Heart.

 

Two other saints who were inspired to promote devotion to the Sacred Heart are St. Madeleine Sophie Barat, who started the Sacred Heart order of teaching nuns, and Sister Josefa Menendez (not officially declared a saint, but whose book, The Way of Divine Love, was approved by Pope Pius XII). Our Lord appeared to Sister Josefa numerous times, revealing His thoughts during the events of His sufferings leading up to His crucifixion.

 

The words of Our Lord to St. Margaret Mary, the words which preceded the request for a special feast day, are words Jesus repeated again and again to Sister Josefa.

 

1. “Behold this Heart, which has so loved men that It has spared nothing, even to exhausting and consuming Itself, in order to testify Its love. In return, I receive from the greater part [of humanity] only ingratitude, by their irreverence and sacrilege, and by the coldness and contempt they have for Me in this Sacrament of Love” [Holy Communion]. It is for this reason I ask thee that the first Friday after the octave of the Blessed Sacrament, be appropriated to a special feast to honor My Heart by receiving Communion on that day, and making reparation for the indignity that It [My Heart] has received. And I promise that My Heart shall dilate to pour out abundantly the influences of My Love on all who will render It this honor or will obtain My Heart being given this honor.”

 

2. “And you, dear souls, why this coldness and indifference… Do I not know that family cares… household concerns… and the requirements of your position in life… make continual calls upon you?… But cannot you spare a few minutes in which to come and prove your affection and your gratitude?… spare a few moments to visit and receive [in Communion] this Prisoner of Love! Were you weak or ill in body, surely you would find time to see a doctor who would cure you? Come, then, to One Who is able to give both strength and health to your soul, and [One Who] watches for you, calls for you, and longs to see you at His side.”

 

3. “The Blessed Sacrament is the Invention of Love. It [the Blessed Sacrament] is life and fortitude for souls, a remedy for every fault, and viaticum for the last passage from time to eternity. In it, sinners recover life for their souls; tepid souls true warmth, fervent souls tranquility…saintly souls wings to fly toward perfection…pure souls sweet honey…”

 

4. “Dearly loved souls, come and learn from your Model that the one thing necessary is surrender to God’s will in humble submission and by a supreme act of the will to accomplish the will of God whatever the circumstances may be. Learn from Him that all important action should be preceded and vivified by prayer, for only in prayer can a soul obtain the strength needed in life’s difficulties. In prayer, God will communicate, will counsel and will inspire.”

 

5. “O souls that I love, I [suffered] to teach you not to faint under your burdens. Never count them as useless, even if you are unable to reckon the result. Submit your judgment and leave the divine will free to do with you whatsoever it wills…remain in My peace. I am always with you even when you do not see Me. How many times Jesus told His disciples and the mothers: ‘Let the little children come to Me, for of such is the Kingdom of God.’”

 

Most Sacred Heart of Jesus, in Whom are all the treasures of wisdom and knowledge, Have Mercy on us.

 

Beatification of Carlo Acutis: The first millennial to be declared Blessed

Assisi, Italy, Oct 10, 2020 / 09:46 am MT – With the beatification of Carlo Acutis in Assisi Saturday, the Catholic Church now has its first “Blessed” who loved Super Mario, Pokémon, and above all the Real Presence of Jesus in the Eucharist.“To be always united with Jesus, this is my life program,” Carlo Acutis wrote at the age of seven.

 

The young Italian computer whiz, who died of leukemia at the age of 15 offering his suffering for the pope and the Church, was beatified Oct. 10 in a Mass at the Basilica of St. Francis of Assisi.

 

Born in 1991, Acutis is the first millennial to be beatified by the Catholic Church. The teen who had an aptitude for computer programming is now one step away from canonization.

 

“Since he was a child … he had his gaze turned to Jesus. Love for the Eucharist was the foundation that kept alive his relationship with God. He often said ‘The Eucharist is my highway to heaven,” Cardinal Agostino Vallini said in his homily for the beatification.

 

“Carlo felt a strong need to help people discover that God is close to us and that it is beautiful to be with him to enjoy his friendship and his grace,” Vallini said.

 

During the beatification Mass, Acutis’ parents processed behind a relic of their son’s heart which was placed near the altar. An apostolic letter from Pope Francis was read aloud in which the pope declared that Carlo Acutis’ feast will take place each year on Oct. 12, the anniversary of his death in Milan in 2006.

 

Masked pilgrims spread out in front of the Basilica of St. Francis and throughout the different piazzas in Assisi to watch the Mass on large screens as only a limited number of people were allowed inside.

 

Acutis’ beatification drew an estimated 3,000 people to Assisi, including people who personally knew Acutis and many other young people inspired by his witness.

 

Mattia Pastorelli, 28, was a childhood friend of Acutis, who first met him when they were both around the age of five. He remembers playing video games, including Halo, with Carlo. (Acutis’ mother also told CNA that Super Mario and Pokémon were Carlo’s favorites.)

 

“Having a friend who is about to become a saint is a very strange emotion,” Pastorelli told CNA Oct. 10. “I knew he was different from others, but now I realize just how special he was.”

 

“I watched him while he was programming websites … He was truly an incredible talent,” he added.

 

In his homily, Cardinal Vallini, the pontifical legate for the Basilica of St. Francis, hailed Acutis as a model of how young people can use technology at the service of the Gospel to “reach as many people as possible and help them know the beauty of friendship with the Lord.”

 

For Carlo, Jesus was “the strength of his life and the purpose of everything he did,” the cardinal said.

 

“He was convinced that to love people and do them good you need to draw energy from the Lord. In this spirit he was very devoted to Our Lady,” he added.

 

“His ardent desire was also that of attracting as many people to Jesus, making himself herald of the Gospel above all with the example of life.”

 

At a young age, Acutis taught himself how to program and went on to create websites cataloguing the world’s Eucharistic miracles and Marian apparitions.

 

“The Church rejoices, because in this very young Blessed the Lord’s words are fulfilled: ‘I have chosen you and appointed you to go and bear much fruit.’ And Carlo ‘went’ and brought the fruit of holiness, showing it as a goal reachable by all and not as something abstract and reserved for a few,” the cardinal said.

 

“He was an ordinary boy, simple, spontaneous, likeable … he loved nature and animals, he played football, he had many friends of his age, he was attracted by modern means of social communication, passionate about computer science and, self-taught, he built websites to transmit the Gospel, to communicate values ​​and beauty,” he said.

 

Assisi is celebrating the beatification of Carlo Acutis with more than two weeks of liturgies and events Oct. 1-17. During this time images of a young Acutis standing with a giant monstrance containing the Eucharist can be seen in front of churches all around the city of St. Francis and St. Clare.

 

People stood in line to pray before the tomb of Carlo Acutis, located in Assisi’s Sanctuary of the Spoliation in the Church of St. Mary Major. The church extended its hours until midnight throughout the beatification weekend to allow as many people as possible to venerate Acutis, with the social distancing measures in place to prevent the spread of the coronavirus.

 

Fr. Boniface Lopez, a Franciscan Capuchin based at the church, told CNA that he noted that many people who visited Acutis’ tomb also took advantage of the opportunity to go to confession, which is being offered in many languages throughout the 17 days when Acutis’ body is visible for venation.

 

“Many people are coming to see Carlo to ask for his blessing … also many young people; they come for confessions, they come because they want to change their lives and they want to come near God and really experience God,” Fr. Lopez said.

 

At a youth vigil the evening before the beatification, pilgrims gathered outside of the Assisi’s Basilica of St. Mary of the Angels while priests heard confessions inside.

 

Churches throughout Assisi also offered additional hours of Eucharistic Adoration to mark Acutis’ beatification.

 

Lopez said that he had also encountered many religious sisters and priests coming on pilgrimage to see Actutis. “Religious come here to ask his blessing to help them to cultivate a greater love for the Eucharist.”

 

As Acutis once said: “When we face the sun we get a tan … but when we stand before Jesus in the Eucharist we become saints.”

 

PRAYER FOR THIS MORNING (SATURDAY, OCTOBER 10)

Blessed Virgin Mary

Prayer for the Morning

 

God has come among his people:

let us give thanks and praise!

 

Glory to the Father, and to the Son,

and to the Holy Spirit, as it was in the beginning,

is now, and will be for ever. Amen. Alleluia!

 

HYMN

 

Lo, how she brings Life with her

Concealed beneath her heart,

Eve’s daughter, brave and chosen,

God’s partner to his art.

Her will, knit with divine will,

Desires his Word be done.

For God she weaves within her,

The body of their Son.

 

All ages call her blessed

Just as she once foretold.

Blest is she amongst women,

Her Child blest from of old.

Blest is she who believes God,

Who carries God’s true Word.

Her Son both God and human

Fulfills great Gabriel’s word.

 

Our Savior, God of mercy,

Remembers Abraham’s fold.

Praise God who casts down tyrants.

Rejoice! Our God is bold.

So sing we with blest Mary

To magnify the Lord

Who raised up his handmaiden.

Oh, holy is the Lord!

 

PSALM 106:1-5

 

In him we were also chosen, destined in accord with the purpose of the One who accomplishes all things according to the intention of his will, so that we might exist for the praise of his glory, we who first hoped in Christ. (Eph 1:11-12)

 

Mary told of the Lord’s mighty deeds and sang his praise. She who is called blessed from age to age seeks only that all people know the joy of blessing God through her Son Jesus Christ, in whom God’s enduring love became visible among us.

 

O give thanks to the Lord for he is good;

for his love endures for ever.

Who can tell the Lord’s mighty deeds?

Who can recount all his praise?

 

They are happy who do what is right,

who at all times do what is just.

O Lord, remember me

out of the love you have for your people.

 

Come to me, Lord, with your help

that I may see the joy of your chosen ones

and may rejoice in the gladness of your nation

and share the glory of your people.

 

Glory to the Father….

 

Word of God (Romans 8:38-39)

 

I am convinced that ­neither death, nor life, nor angels, nor principalities, nor present things, nor future things, nor powers, nor height, nor depth, nor any ­other ­creature will be able to separate us from the love of God in Christ Jesus our Lord.

 

Praised be Jesus Christ,

now and for ever!

 

CANTICLE OF ZECHARIAH

 

He who did not spare his own Son but handed him over for us all, how will he not also give us everything else along with him? (Rom 8:32)

 

Blessed be the Lord, the God of Israel;

he has come to his people and set them free.

He has raised up for us a mighty savior,

born of the house of his servant David.

 

Through his holy prophets he promised of old

that he would save us from our enemies,

from the hands of all who hate us.

 

He promised to show mercy to our fathers

and to remember his holy covenant.

 

This was the oath he swore to our father Abraham:

to set us free from the hands of our enemies,

free to worship him without fear,

holy and righteous in his sight

all the days of our life.

 

You, my child, shall be called the prophet

of the Most High;

for you will go before the Lord to prepare his way,

to give his people knowledge of salvation

by the forgiveness of their sins.

 

In the tender compassion of our God

the dawn from on high shall break upon us,

to shine on those who dwell in darkness

and the shadow of death,

and to guide our feet into the way of peace.

 

Glory to the Father…

 

INTERCESSIONS

 

God so loved the world that he gave his Only Begotten Son for our salvation. With joyful trust, we pray:

 

R/Give thanks to the Lord, for he is good!

 

God all-powerful, you created all things by your almighty Word:

– for the gift of the created world, we pray: R/

 

God all-merciful, you delivered your people from ­slavery in Egypt:

– for the gift of freedom in Christ, we pray: R/

 

God all-loving, you entrusted to Mary’s faithful obedience the care of your Church:

– for the gift of redemption made manifest in her, we pray: R/

 

(Personal intentions)

 

Our Father….

 

O God, no power on earth can silence your enduring Word of love, born of the Virgin, put to death on the cross, buried in the earth, raised to eternal glory. Pour forth upon your people the Spirit who set the first disciples afire with your praise and with zeal to proclaim the Gospel. Through our Lord Jesus Christ, your Son, who lives and reigns with you in the unity of the Holy Spirit, one God, for ever and ever. Amen.

Bless Me, O Lord.

 

Heavenly Father, Almighty God,

I humble myself before your Presence.

What a joy it is to come to you.

I thank you and I praise your infinite Majesty,

Omnipotence and Perfections.

Please forgive me of all my sins.

Lord I come to you in my nothingness.

I want to worship you and adore you,

to love you with all my heart,

with all my mind,

with all my soul

and with all my strength.

I want to burn with desire for you like an angel.

I need you my Lord,

I am nothing without you.

I ask you to raise me before your Glory.

Shine your light upon me,

allow me to walk with you

and always do your Holy Will.

Protect me and bless me O Merciful Lord.

Fill me with your Holy Spirit,

grant me peace, love and joy.

Heal me, bless me and sanctify me O Lord;

make me a blessing for all those around me.

Amen.