A Prayer to St. Christina
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Today is the feast day of St. Christina the Astonishing. Why is she astonishing…well, if everyone thought you were dead and during the course of your funeral you shot up and proceeded to levitate to the rafters of the church, they’d probably call you astonishing too. Now I’ve been known to fly into a panic and fly into a rage, and I even fly to Costco for a good deal…but fly in church? Nope, not me. But all things are possible, with God. This is just one of the stories I read about her a long time ago in an old version of Bulter’s Lives of the Saints.  What else do we know:
After her death experience, she related that she had witnessed heaven, hell, and purgatory. It is written that she said “As soon as my soul was separated from my body it was received by angels who conducted it to a very gloomy place, entirely filled with souls” where the torments there that they endured “appeared so excessive” that it was “impossible to give an idea of their rigor.”
She continued,”I saw among them many of my acquaintances” and touched deeply by their sad condition asked if this was Hell, but was told that it was Purgatory. Her angel guides brought her to Hell where again she recognized those she had formerly known. Next she was transported to Heaven, “even to the Throne of Divine Majesty” where she was “regarded with a favorable eye” and she experienced extreme joy and these words were spoken to her, ” Assuredly, My dear daughter, you will one day be with Me. Now, however, I allow you to choose, either to remain with Me henceforth from this time, or to return again to earth to accomplish a mission of charity and suffering. In order to deliver from the flames of Purgatory those souls which have inspired you with so much compassion, you shall suffer for them upon earth: you shall endure great torments, without however dying from their effects. And not only will you relieve the departed, but the example which you will give to the living, and your continual suffering, will lead sinners to be converted and to expiate their crimes. After having ended this new life, you shall return here laden with merits.”
Christina, at hearing this and “seeing the great advantages for souls” without hesitation she agreed to return to life and arose that same moment. She told those around her that for the sole purpose of relief of the departed and conversion of sinners did she return and that none should be astonished at the penances that she would practice, nor the life that she would lead hence forth, she is quoted as saying, “It will be so extraordinary that nothing like it has ever been seen.” Making penances for the souls of Purgatory and Hell would henceforth become a major theme in her life.
As chronicled by her contemporaries, she threw herself into burning furnaces and there suffered great tortures for extended time uttering frightful cries, yet coming forth with no sign of burning upon her. In winter she would plunge into the frozen Meuse River for hours and days and weeks at a time all the while praying to God and imploring His Mercy. She allowed herself to be carried by the currents down river to the mill where the wheel “whirled her round in a manner frightful to behold” yet she had no dislocations or broken bones. She was chased by dogs that bit and tore her flesh. She ran from them into thickets of thorns, and though covered in blood she would return with no wound or scar.
Christina died in 1224 of natural causes, aged 74. – Wikipedia
After reading this, maybe you might want to, at least, pray with St. Christina the Astonishing, for the Poor Souls in Puragatory…click on this link to join in
Tags: angels, conversion, death experience, feast day, hell and purgatory, His Mercy, Meuse River, mission, saints, suffering, women of the middle ages
This entry was posted on Wednesday, July 24th, 2013 at 12:02 am
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It’s with GREAT joy we present the Discerning Hearts app for iPhones, iPads, and Android devices!! Â Now listening to and downloading of the audio, as well as navigating the site, on these particular devices has dramatically improved. Â And it’s FREE to all.
It can be found on iTunes here  It can found for android devices on Google Play here
One of the prime mission objectives of our apostolate is to freely make available  deeply penetrating teachings on prayer, discernment and Catholic Social Teaching to the seeking heart.  It’s our response in using  new media technology to reach the most isolated, whether someone is in a small home in India, in a jeep in the outback of Australia, in an apartment in New York City…any where in the world, our goal is to be available to you!  And we use podcasting to share this message so it can be penetratingly delivered to the heart.  There’s something special that happens when you can hear the message, listen to the voice sharing the insight…it’s a relationship of sorts which forms between teacher and disciple. And our hope is that it will lead to an encounter with the person of Jesus Christ.  Once encountered, then discernment is needed to know  how to live out that relationship in today’s world.
If you feel our mission is a worthy one, we invite you to help us with your prayers, and if possible, with a financial donation to help us with our expenses. Â We are a fully tax-exempt 501 c 3 non- profit charity.
God bless and we hope you will pass the “app” on to others.
Tags: Discerning Hearts, Google Play, GREAT, mission
This entry was posted on Thursday, August 23rd, 2012 at 12:57 pm
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I love the writing of Evelyn Waugh…his prose are some of the best of our time, if not of all time.  And when that talent is used to pen a biography of the heroic English martyr, Edmund Campion, a tremendous blessing has been given to all who gleen it’s pages.  What a story…what a life.  We are joined once again by the wonderful Vivian Dudro to discuss this incredible work, as well as the life and times of this great saint.
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You can find the book here
From the description:
Evelyn Waugh presented his biography of St. Edmund Campion, the Elizabethan poet, scholar and gentleman who became the haunted, trapped and murdered priest as “a simple, perfectly true story of heroism and holiness.â€
But it is written with a novelist’s eye for the telling incident and with all the elegance and feeling of a master of English prose. From the years of
success as an Oxford scholar, to entry into the newly founded Society of Jesus and a professorship in Prague, Campion’s life was an inexorable progress towards the doomed mission to England. There followed pursuit, betrayal, a spirited defense of loyalty to the Queen, and a horrifying martyr’s death at Tyburn.
Tags: catholic, catholic podcast, catholic prayer, cathollc spirituality, edmund campion, english martyrs, english reformation, Evelyn Waugh, holiness, ignatius press, mission
This entry was posted on Monday, July 2nd, 2012 at 12:47 pm
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“As a sheaf of grain is tied together in the middle and spreads out at either end, so Mary’s life is bound together by her assent†– from the beginning of “The Handmaid of the Lord” by the great 20th century wife, mother, physician and mystic Adrienne von Spyer. It has become my absolute favorite book on the Blessed Virgin Mary. It has transformed my understanding and deepened my love and appreciation for Mary, the Mother of God…Our Blessed Mother.
Mary’s assent to the Lord binds the whole of her life such that “From this assent her life receives its meaning and form and unfolds toward past and futureâ€. This assent, the great “Yes” to the will of God is the moment.
“This single, all-encompassing act accompanies her at every moment of her existence, illuminates every turning point of her life, bestows upon every situation its own particular meaning and in all situations gives May herself the grace of renewed understanding.  Her assent gives full meaning to every breath, every movement, every prayer of the Mother of Godâ€
Everything that we understand Mary to be, do, and say finds her assent at its source.  But, the assent must be understood as one of freedom, “This is the nature of an assent: it binds the one who gives it, yet it allows him complete freedom in shaping its expressionâ€.  Her assent binds her to the Lord, yet it frees her to express herself dramatically much like the sheaf is bound by the cord around its middle but the sheaf bursts freely outward from the binding cord.
“Mary’s meeting with the angel is like the summation of her entire preceding life of contemplation. It is the first thing we learn about her. We do not know who she is, we do not know her past. But when we learn that she saw the angel, the whole composition of her soul becomes visible. The angel which appears is the fulfillment of her prayer – not in the sense that she had prayed for the appearance or prepared herself for it, but rather in the sense that she has held herself in readiness for a mission still unknown to her. She has lived in an attitude of prayer, and in virtue of this life she is capable in the crucial moment of seeing and obeying the angel who comes to her. Both vision and obedience flow from the same source in her; from the openness toward the mission which God may give her, when and in whatever way he likes. Her obedience is the prototype of every future instance of Christian obedience, which draws its whole meaning from the life of prayer and the perception of God’s will.†[Adrienne von Speyr: Handmaid of the Lord. From the Chapter, “Mary and the Angel“, pg. 27]
Take a look at an excerpt from “Handmaid of the Lord” you can purchase it from Igantius Press as a book or you may like to download the mp3 reading. Check it out….
Tags: adreinne von spyer, adrienne von speyr, angel, assent, blessed virgin mary, catholic, catholic podcast, catholic prayer, cathollc spirituality, handmaid of the lord, mary the mother of god, mission, prayer
This entry was posted on Sunday, March 25th, 2012 at 3:53 am
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[powerpress = “Vatican-Radio”]
 Pope Benedict XVI heard the second in a series of sermons dedicated to the theme of the New Evangelization. After singing the ancient Advent hymn, Rorate coeli, Capuchin Father Raniero Cantalamessa delivered a 5-part discourse centered on the history of the Church’s preaching of the Gospel, beginning with the great re-thinking of the relationship between the pilgrim Church on Earth to the secular authority accomplished by St Augustine of Hippo, and leading through the great periods of evangelization – and in some cases re-evangelization – of the peoples of Europe in the wake of the collapse of the Roman Empire in the West, before turning to the magnificent renewal of learning and missionary zeal – concentrating on the creation and development of monasticism, which itself ran through the dark centuries after the fall of the West and made possible the magnificent achievements of the High Middle Ages.
Then, Fr. Cantalamessa turned to the present, reflecting on the relationship between Mission and Contemplation, saying, “It is not enough that there be in the Church those who dedicate themselves to contemplation and those who dedicate themselves to mission: there must rather be a synthesis of the two things in the very life of every missionary.â€
Fr. Cantalamessa concluded his reflections on a Marian note, saying,
“Mary is the Star of Evangelization, for she brought the Word, not to this or that people, but to the whole world,â€
and noting that she did so by carrying the Word in her womb – not in her mouth or on her lips. “She was filled,†he said, “even physically, with Christ – and she radiated Him with her very presence
Tags: catholic, catholic podcast, catholic prayer, cathollc spirituality, contemplation, mission, vatican radio
This entry was posted on Saturday, December 10th, 2011 at 6:03 am
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Sometimes you just smile through an entire interview wishing it wouldn’t end…that’s what it is like talking with Joan Wester Anderson. What a truly lovely woman! She seems to have a very special mission for the Father in Heaven – to make known the glory of those special messangers of the Lord, the Holy Angels of God, and to relate the heavenly miraculous moments which occur in  the everyday around the world. Joan is a beautiful story teller both in print and on the air. I know you will enjoy our conversation….[powerpress]
Visit Joan’s website at http://joanwanderson.com/
It’s really inspirational!
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Here is another conversation with Joan on the Angels
Tags: catholic, catholic podcast, catholic prayer, cathollc spirituality, holy angels, Holy Angels of God, Joan Wester, joan wester anderson, loyola press, miracles, mission, Visit Joan
This entry was posted on Tuesday, July 27th, 2010 at 1:31 am
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