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How to calm the anxiety of your mind

If you are feeling anxious right now, take the advice of a spiritual master, St. Francis de Sales.

 

 

Anxiety can easily cripple our lives, leading us to sadness and, in some cases, despair. How can we grapple with such an intense feeling, especially when exterior events disrupt everything?St. Francis de Sales, a spiritual master of the 17th century, wrote about how to resolve anxiety of the mind in his book, Introduction to the Devout Life. He starts off by explaining the negative effects of this feeling.

 

Anxiety of mind is not so much an abstract temptation, as the source whence various temptations arise. Sadness, when defined, is the mental grief we feel because of our involuntary ailments; whether the evil be exterior, such as poverty, sickness or contempt; or interior, such as ignorance, dryness, depression or temptation. Directly that the soul is conscious of some such trouble, it is downcast, and so trouble sets in.

 

He believed one of the central keys to calm an anxious mind is to rely on God’s power, rather than our own.

 

If any one strives to be delivered from his troubles out of love of God, he will strive patiently, gently, humbly and calmly, looking for deliverance rather to God’s Goodness and Providence than to his own industry or efforts.

 

Unfortunately, when we try to get out of our anxiety on our own, we become easily frustrated by the lack of results.

 

[The person becomes] exceedingly impatient and troubled, which does not mend matters, but on the contrary makes them worse, and so he gets into an unreasonable state of anxiety and distress, till he begins to fancy that there is no cure for his trouble. Thus you see how a disturbance, which was right at the outset, begets anxiety, and anxiety goes on into an excessive distress, which is exceedingly dangerous.

 

Instead of trying to calm your mind and get rid of anxiety through our own efforts, de Sales suggests daily examining our conscience and seeing if we have successfully placed our troubles in God’s hands.

 

Examine yourself often, at least night and morning … See whether your soul is fully under control, or whether it has not in anywise escaped from beneath your hand, to plunge into some unruly love, hate, envy, lust, fear, vexation or joy. And if it has so strayed, before all else seek it out, and quietly bring it back to the Presence of God, once more placing all your hopes and affections under the direction of His Holy Will.

In addition to giving your anxiety to God, de Sales recommends telling a trusted friend or spiritual mentor. As he writes, “If you can lay your anxiety before your spiritual guide, or at least before some trusty and devout friend, you may be sure that you will find great solace. The heart finds relief in telling its troubles to another, just as the body when suffering from persistent fever finds relief from bleeding. It is the best of remedies.”

If anxiety is plaguing your mind, consider St. Francis de Sales’ advice and don’t try to do it alone, but look to God and a trusted friend for help.

These daily spiritual exercises will keep you humble

St. Francis Borgia laid out meditations for daily activities that challenge our comfortable lives.

 

 

Humility is a virtue we can always grow in. Especially during this modern age, with all of our comforts and technology, it’s easy to take everything for granted.If you want to humble yourself on a daily basis, you do not need to look farther than St. Francis Borgia!

 

He was among the first members of the newly formed Society of Jesus in the 16th century, and wrote some very powerful spiritual works.

 

Among them was a Mirror of Christian Actions, which outlined specific meditations to ponder while doing normal, everyday tasks.

 

He begins with a meditation while dressing in the morning.

 

Enter into a profound sentiment of confusion in considering that you are well clothed and that Jesus Christ was fastened naked to a cross for love of you. Thank Him for having assumed our nature although He knew at the time how ungrateful we should be for this favor and also for having given us clothes to cover us, although we have so often despised the nuptial robe of grace with which He clothed us. While dressing yourself you are performing one of the works of mercy which is to clothe the naked. Implore Him to accept this action in consideration of the garment of ignominy with which He was covered in the palace of Herod.

 

 

That is an entirely different frame of mind to take while putting on your clothes!

Francis also writes about what our thoughts should be while eating dinner.

 

Return thanks to God for the goodness with which he has repeated in the evening a favor for which you had so badly thanked Him in the morning. Ask Him by the love which caused Him to give Himself for your nourishment in the Last Supper to prepare your heart to receive Him with humility and to live so united to Him by charity that He may be always in you and you in Him.

 

Again, this puts a new spin on eating, and helps sanctify those ordinary moments of the day.

 

To conclude the day, Francis even has a meditation for undressing and getting into your pajamas.

 

Consider that you undress yourself in order to sleep with more comfort while Jesus Christ was born on straw for love of you and had not whereon to repose His head. Thank Him for having suffered so many hardships to merit for you the grace to renounce the devil.

 

These simple reflections give us a healthy dose of humility and remind us how comfortable our lives really are, especially when compared to the sufferings Jesus Christ endured for our sake.

PRAYER FOR THIS EVENING (FRIDAY, OCTOBER 9)

Prayer for the Evening

 

Christ suffered that we might rejoice:

come, 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

 

This hymn can be sung to the tune used for

Alleluia! Alleluia! Let the Holy Anthem Rise

 

See, the streams of living waters,

Springing from eternal love,

Well supply thy sons and daughters,

And all fear of want remove.

Who can faint while such a river

Ever flows their thirst to assuage?

Grace which like the Lord, the giver,

Never fails from age to age.

 

PSALM 69:2-4, 14-16

 

My friends it is who wrong me;/ before God my eyes drop tears. (Jb 16:20)

 

Jesus wept the tears of suffering humanity and, weeping, transformed them into the waters of life. These waters, flowing from his wounded side, wash away all the tears that stain the face of a sorrowing world.

 

Save me, O God,

for the waters have risen to my neck.

 

I have sunk into the mud of the deep

and there is no foothold.

I have entered the waters of the deep

and the waves overwhelm me.

 

I am wearied with all my crying,

my throat is parched.

My eyes are wasted away

from looking for my God.

 

This is my prayer to you,

my prayer for your favor.

In your great love, answer me, O God,

with your help that never fails:

rescue me from sinking in the mud;

save me from my foes.

 

Save me from the waters of the deep

lest the waves overwhelm me.

Do not let the deep engulf me

nor death close its mouth on me.

 

Glory to the Father….

 

Word of God (Ezekiel 47:1b, 8-9a)

 

I saw water flowing out from beneath the threshold of the temple toward the east, for the façade of the temple was toward the east.… He said to me, “This water flows into the eastern district down upon the Arabah, and empties into the sea, the salt waters, which it makes fresh. Wherever the river flows, every sort of living creature that can multiply shall live.”

 

One soldier thrust his lance into his side,

and immediately blood and water flowed out.

(Jn 19:34)

 

CANTICLE OF MARY

 

Jesus said, “Destroy this temple and in three days I will raise it up.” He was speaking about the temple of his body. (cf. Jn 2:19, 21)

 

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

 

Let us pray to Jesus Christ, our compassionate high priest, who was tempted in every way that we are but did not sin.

 

R/Listen to your people’s plea!

 

Lord Jesus, you wept over Jerusalem:

– grant conversion of heart to all those who have reject­ed you. R/

 

Lord Jesus, you wept over the death of Lazarus:

– comfort those who mourn. R/

 

Lord Jesus, you suffered sorrow and distress in the ­garden of Gethsemane:

– abide with those who watch alone tonight in pain and fear. R/

 

(Personal intentions)

 

Our Father….

 

May the God of all grace who called us to his eternal ­glory through Christ Jesus restore, confirm, strengthen, and establish us after we have suffered a little. Amen. (cf. 1 Pt 5:10)

 

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.

Prayer to St. Michael for protection against spiritual enemies

St. Michael is the archangel to turn to when struggling against the attacks of demonic spiritual forces.

 

St. Paul famously wrote in his letter to the Ephesians, “For our struggle is not with flesh and blood but with the principalities, with the powers, with the world rulers of this present darkness, with the evil spirits in the heavens” (Ephesians 6:12).There exists a great battle for our soul, and we are right in the middle of it. Satan and all his minions are working tirelessly to bring us down and lead us away from God.

 

The good news is that Satan’s power can be defeated, and the angels are our protectors, especially St. Michael the Archangel.

 

Here is a prayer to St. Michael that asks for protection against all spiritual enemies.

 

Glorious St. Michael, prince of the heavenly hosts, who stands always ready to give assistance to the people of God; who fought with the dragon, the old serpent, and cast him out of heaven, and now valiantly defends the Church of God that the gates of hell may never prevail against her, I earnestly entreat you to assist me also, in the painful and dangerous conflict which I have to sustain against the same formidable foe.

Be with me, O mighty Prince! that I may courageously fight and wholly vanquish that proud spirit, whom you have by the divine power, so gloriously overthrown, and whom our powerful King, Jesus Christ, has, in our nature, so completely overcome; to the end that having triumphed over the enemy of my salvation, I may with you and the holy angels, praise the clemency of God who, having refused mercy to the rebellious angels after their fall, has granted repentance and forgiveness to fallen man.

Amen.

Ask St. Joseph to increase your love of Jesus

St. Joseph loved Jesus dearly and can help fan that flame in our heart.

 

 

During his short life on earth, St. Joseph loved Jesus most tenderly. He saw Jesus on a daily basis and likely slept next to him as well. This intimacy led to a deep love for Jesus and now he is fully united with his son in Heaven.Here is a short prayer from the book St. Joseph, his life, his virtues that asks St. Joseph to help us love Jesus more. We can all grow in our love of Jesus, and St. Joseph is the perfect intercessor and example.

 

St. Joseph, who first after Mary adored the Infant Jesus, obtain for me

love for Jesus. St. Joseph, who protected the Divine Babe, beg of Jesus

to grant me His love. St. Joseph, whose hands were privileged to

supply the wants and comforts of Jesus, obtain for me the grace to

work and to live only for the love of Jesus.

Amen.

Soothe your soul with this calming prayer

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If you are feeling anxious, let God’s presence fill your soul with his peace.

 

 

It’s relatively easy to let anxiety take us over. Daily stress and world events combine to overwhelm our mind and soul with darkness.The good news is that Jesus Christ has come to bring light to that dark place and give us his peace, even in the midst of our most stressful situations!

 

Here is a brief yet calming prayer adapted from The Family Prayer Book that asks God’s presence to invade your soul, granting his peace and security.

 

O, my dear Savior, the God of my heart, come to me and fill my soul. I

love you, O God; teach me to love you more and more.

 

Let nothing disturb me and please soothe my soul with your

presence. Grant me that love and devotion which may calm every

worldly thought and care, and make my heart a blessed abode of

divine charity.

 

I thank you, eternal Father, for having given us this pledge of your

mercy. Prepare me for your presence by the help of your Holy Spirit.

Grant me now and ever to love you with my whole heart, with my

whole soul, with all my strength, and with all my mind, and never to

forget the great mercy you desire to give to me.

Amen.

How to Care Less About What People Think of You, and More About God

Being faithful to the voice that cries out in our hearts

 

 

Why you should look at God when you act, and not so much at other people:Sometimes we care more about people’s expectations than about being faithful to the voice that cries out in our hearts.

 

There are projects that we don’t undertake because we are afraid of failure; things that we don’t say because we are afraid of being rejected; actions we avoid because we fear others’ contempt. We are very concerned about other people’s reaction to our decisions: we want everyone to agree with us.

 

Sometimes we impose our decisions, with the idea that they be approved by everyone because we have decreed that it be so. When it doesn’t turn out that way, we become despondent. We hope — in vain — that everyone will agree with us, applaud us, and praise our decisions, actions and attitudes.

 

This is why we are often not willing to do anything unless the people we care about approve. We prefer to keep quiet so as not to attract attention or look different.

 

We don’t want others to judge us for what we do or say. We easily feel judged, and other people’s opinion matters more to us that the truth about our life. We care more about their expectations than about being faithful to the voice that cries out in our hearts.

 

I want to learn to look through the window of my soul that opens upon the wide sea of God, and not at the people who approve or reject me.

 

I want to look farther and farther through the window of my soul that brings me to God and shows me, as the window of a shrine might, Mary’s face.

 

I like to contemplate the immense sea of God. Then, the place where I find myself, my decisions, and the steps I take, all stop being so important. Then, my actions are no longer as relevant.

 

Gazing at the sea of God and his infinite mercy, life appears small and God becomes immense. All my fears, problems and concerns, compared to him, become small.

 

When I hold his hand, I can do the greatest things, because I am not expecting others to approve my actions. I am capable of doing more, because I am not as afraid of failure.

 

Sometimes, seen from the perspective of my vanity, my fears are magnified. Life, when closed in on itself, becomes small and anxieties grow much bigger. When we look to God, our fears almost disappear, and our anxieties fade away.
The exact opposite happens with happiness. We laugh more heartily looking at the sea in our soul. I learn to laugh at life at at myself. My face lights up and, although I don’t know exactly how it happens, I look a bit more like Jesus. The horizon expands and I love more and better, more deeply.

 

Looking into the depths of my soul, I become more childlike and I dream of the impossible. When I contemplate the sea of God in my soul, my life seems vaster, more infinite; my dreams have no limit or end. I can do anything.

 

I am no longer afraid of failure. The doors burst open and I emerge from my self-centeredness. Rooted in the deepest truth about myself, from my very being which desires to belong to God, I give myself to others.

 

I give without seeking anyone’s approval, and accepting God’s mercy, without fear of being judged or condemned, because I only desire God’s peace.

 

AND TODAY WE CELEBRATE… Saint of the Day: Our Lady of Good Help (FRIDAY, OCTOBER 9)

The only Marian apparition approved in the United States

 

The story behind this celebration

 

+ Devotion to this Blessed Mother under the title of “Our Lady of Good Help” dates to three apparitions of the Virgin Mary in 1859.

 

+ In early October of that year, Adele Brise, a Belgian immigrant, experienced a vision of the Mother of God near Champion, Wisconsin. Adele described the woman as surrounded by bright light, clothed in white, with a yellow sash around her waist and a crown of stars above her flowing blond hair, and standing between two trees. No words were exchanged during those first encounters.

 

+ On October 9, Adele experienced a second vision. This time, she asked the woman who she was. The woman responded, “I am the Queen of Heaven, who prays for the conversion of sinners, and I wish you to do the same.” She then instructed Adele to “gather the children in this wild country and teach them what they should know for salvation.”

 

+ Adele would go on to establish a small school and devoted the remainder of her life to teaching local children. She also formed a small community of religious sisters to assist in this work.

 

+ In 2010, Bishop David Ricken of the Diocese of Green Bay, approved the apparitions, making this the first officially recognized apparition of the Mother of God in the United States.

 

+ To learn more about the National Shrine of Our Lady of Good Help, visit: https://www.shrineofourladyofgoodhelp.com/

 

For prayer and reflection

 

“The Mother of Jesus in the glory which she posses in body and soul in heaven is the image and beginning of the Church as it is to be perfected in the world to come (cf. 2 Peter 3:10), a sign of certain hope and comfort to the pilgrim People of God.”—Lumen Gentium of the Second Vatican Council

 

Prayer

 

Grant, Lord God, that we, your servants,

may rejoice in unfailing health of mind and body,

and, through the glorious intercession of Blessed Mary ever-Virgin,

may we be set free from present sorrow

and come to enjoy eternal happiness.

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.

 

(from The Roman Missal: Common of the Blessed Virgin Mary)

 

Saint profiles prepared by Brother Silas Henderson, S.D.S.

The miracle that led to the canonization of Fatima’s Jacinta and Francisco

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One of the Sisters ran to the relics, next to the tabernacle, and prayed, ‘Shepherds, save this child, who is a child like you!’”

 

 

The Brazilian parents of the boy whose miraculous healing led to canonization of two of the Fatima children spoke of what happened. “On March 3, 2013, before 8:00 p.m, our son Lucas, who was playing with his little sister Eduarda, fell out of a window from a height of 20 feet. He was five years old,” related the boy’s father, Joao Batista.

 

João and his wife Lucila Yurie spoke amidst tears at the Fatima Shrine during a press conference held in advance of the pope’s arrival. The two Fatima visionaries, Jacinta and Francisco, were canonized by Pope Francis on Saturday 13 May 2017 (the 100th anniversary of the apparitions at Fatima).

“His head hit the ground and he sustained a very serious injury, which caused a loss of brain tissue [damage],” Joao said. Barely alive, Lucas “was given medical care in our city, Juranda, and given the severity of his condition, he was transferred to the hospital in Campo Mourao, Parana. When we got there, Lucas was in a deep coma. His heart stopped twice, and they performed an emergency operation.”

The couple said it was right then that “we began to pray to Jesus and Our Lady of Fatima, to whom we have a great devotion,” Batista shared with Catholic News Agency.

“The next day we called the Carmelite convent of Campo Mouro to ask the sisters to pray for the boy,” he said. Due to the period of silence held by the religious community, the sisters did not receive the message.

Lucas’ condition deteriorated over the next few days, his father saud. On March 6, the doctors “told us that the chance of the boy surviving was low, and if he did survive, his recovery would be very slow,” and he would likely deal with “severe cognitive disabilities or even [remain] in a vegetative state.”

On March 7, Batista said, “we called the convent again.” This time, the prayer request was received by the sisters. “One of them ran to the relics of Blessed Francisco and Jacinta, which were next to the tabernacle, and felt the impulse to pray the following prayer: ‘Shepherds, save this child, who is a child like you’…she also persuaded the other sisters to pray to the little shepherds to intercede for him.”

“And so they did,” Batista said. “In the same way, all of us, the family, began to pray to the little shepherds, and two days later, on March 9, Lucas woke up and began to speak, even asking for his little sister.”

Lucas was moved from the ICU on March 11 and was discharged from the hospital a few days later.  Ever since, Lucas “has been completely well and has no symptoms or after effects,” the child’s father said. “He has the same intelligence (as he did before the accident), the same character, everything is the same.”

“The doctors, some of them non-believers, said that his recovery had no explanation.”

Lucas’ parents expressed gratitude to the doctors who cared for their son, and to the postulator of the canonization cause of the little shepherds, “for all the care given throughout this process.”

Most especially they thank God. “We thank God for the cure of Lucas and we know with all the faith we have in our hearts, that this miracle was obtained through the intercession of the little shepherds Francisco and Jacinta.”

“We feel a great joy because this is the miracle that leads to their canonization, but especially we feel the blessing of the friendship of these two children who helped our child and who now help our family,” Batista said.

How to adore God in the silence of your home

Adoration is a form of prayer that can be performed anywhere and doesn’t require a church building.

 

 

Often when Catholics think of adoration, they envision kneeling before the altar in church and adoring God present in the Holy Eucharist. While that may be one of the most effective ways to adore God, most Catholics never get the chance to enter a church building during the week and can’t spend extra time in church on Sunday.In reality a prayer of adoration can be performed anywhere, in a church or in your living room. The key is to know what adoration is and how to engage in this type of prayer.

 

The Catechism of the Catholic Church explains that “Adoration is the first attitude of man acknowledging that he is a creature before his Creator. It exalts the greatness of the Lord who made us and the almighty power of the Savior who sets us free from evil. Adoration is homage of the spirit to the ‘King of Glory,’ respectful silence in the presence of the ‘ever greater’ God. Adoration of the thrice-holy and sovereign God of love blends with humility and gives assurance to our supplications” (CCC 2628).

 

Adoration at its most essential element is a recognition that God is God and we are not. This type of prayer acknowledges the wonder and beauty of God and how his protective hand is over all creation.

 

St. Ignatius of Loyola provides a simple way to perform an act of adoration in his Spiritual Exercises.

 

A step or two before the place where I am to contemplate or meditate, I will stand for the space of an Our Father and, with my consciousness raised on high, consider how the Lord my God looks upon me. Then I will make an act of reverence or humility.

 

We often forget that God is everywhere, not only in the church building. He is constantly at our side and looking upon us with kindness and mercy. When we realize this simple fact, we can adore God anywhere we are and recognize his loving presence.