Tuesday, 23 December 2014

Catholic Herald 

Merry Christmas, Sheryl. You are truly a beacon of God's light, shining brightly to the needy and helpless around the globe.


Nativity scene and Christmas tree invite us to make room for God, says Pope

The Christmas tree and Nativity scene outside St Peter's Basilica (AP)
Francis says Vatican Christmas decorations carry 'a message of light, hope and love'
God did not come to the world with arrogance to impose his might, but offered his powerful love through a fragile child, Pope Francis has said.
The Christmas tree and Nativity scene are reminders of this mystery of the Incarnation and they both carry “a message of light, hope and love”, he said as he met the people who donated the centrepieces of the Vatican Christmas decorations.
The Italian city of Verona donated the Nativity scene, and the southern Italian city of Catanzaro donated the 82-foot white spruce tree, which both adorn St Peter’s Square. The tree was lit and the scene officially unveiled during an early evening ceremony in the square on December 19.
Earlier in the day, the Pope thanked the delegates for their generosity and highlighted the importance of the Christmas creche and tree for Christians, as they are a sign of how “God made man to save us and the light that Jesus brought to the world with his birth”.
But the Nativity scene and Christmas tree touch the hearts of everyone, “even those who do not believe because they speak of fraternity, intimacy and friendship, calling all people of our time to rediscover the beauty of simplicity, sharing and solidarity”, he said.
“They are an invitation to unity, harmony and peace; an invitation to make room – in our personal and social life – for God, who did not come with arrogance to impose his might, but offers us his omnipotent love through the fragile person of a child,” he said.
“Let us follow him, the true light, in order to not lose our way and to reflect, in turn, light and warmth upon those who are going through difficult and dark times,” he said.
A choir from Serrastretta near Catanzaro and the band of the Vatican gendarme corps were to provide traditional Christmas music, both sacred and popular, during the lighting ceremony.
After the Christmas lighting, Vatican officials were scheduled to flip the switch for the new 315-bulb LED lighting on the facade and dome of St Peter’s Basilica. The Vatican said the new bulbs should save about 70 per cent on the basilica’s lighting bill. A similar system was installed at the Basilica of St Mary Major.

Sunday, 14 December 2014

To my best friend, Sheryl. You will always have my heart and soul and no time or distance can ever change that. My love for you is eternal and you are truly a soul mate to me.

“My Sister, My Bride”–6 Reasons Why Catholics MUST Marry Their Best Friend

Taking a cue from the classic rom-com, When Harry Met Sally,  an article at RealClearReligion.com argues that husbands and wives should not expect to be each other’s best friend.   The author, Markshutterstock_234590935 Judge, writes,
“I married my best friend.”  You often hear this said, from new brides to celebrities. Even the President of the United States says he married his best friend.  As nice at it may seem, a man should not marry his best friend. He should marry his wife, who should understand that she is not his best friend. A man should have a male friend who is almost an equal to his wife.” (Read More).
I’ll be frank.  In my opinion, Judge’s assertion amounts to  a lot of dangerous rubbish.  Strong words?  Absolutely.  Here’s why I feel so passionately about this.  Marriage is the foundational unit of the family and family is the basic unit of civilization.  If you get marriage wrong, you get everything wrong.  That’s why St. John Paul II was so concerned with promoting a healthy vision of marriage as the cornerstone of his plan of evangelization in the Third Millennium.
I would argue that “best friendship” is at the heart of the Catholic vision of marriage.  Understanding this is critical on both a psychological and theological level.  For the Catholic, marrying one’s best friend isn’t just a nice thing.  It is an imperative.  I would have to write a book to explore this idea in depth, but here are a few thoughts….
1. What is a “Friend”?
It might be helpful to consider what a friend actually is.  Jesus says, “I call you friends” (Jn 15:15) and just prior to that, in Jn 15:13, Jesus tells us that the heart of true friendship is a willingness to lay down one’s life for one’s friend.  Friendship then, is a radical commitment to work for the ultimate good of the other, even to the extent that one is willing to dedicate one’s entire life to doing so.  What better image of this kind of friendship is there than marriage where husband and wife are called to spend their lives perfecting each other (Eph 5:25-26) so that they might, one day, be ready to celebrate the Eternal Wedding Feast in Heaven?
In Ephesians 5:31, St Paul reminds us that marriage is THE primary image of Jesus’ friendship with his bride, the Church, and asserts that a husband must be willing to lay down his life for his wife just as Jesus Christ–our friend  and bridegroom (c.f., Jn. 15:15; Rev 19:7-9)–does for each of us, his bride (Eph 5:25).  In doing so, we see an image of marriage as the ultimate friendship, THE friendship that most perfectly images the nature of the unitive relationship God desires with his friend & bride, humankind.
2. My Sister, My Bride
The Song of Songs 4:9 says, You have stolen my heart, my sister, my bride; you have stolen my heart with one glance of your eyes, with one jewel of your necklace.”  This is just one of several places
the author of The Song of Songs refers to this couplet of “sister” AND “bride” to define the nature of both ideal marital and divine love (remember, the Song of Songs is not just a love poem between a bride and bridegroom, Catholics see this as an intimate description of the nature of the relationship God desires with each of us, his bride).
When St. John Paul II, considered marriage in the light of this passage, he asserted that for marital, erotic, love to be properly ordered, it has to be rooted in a recognition that one’s spouse is a person who deserves to be supremely loved and cherished before being desired.  Calling his beloved both sister and bride, the bridegroom in the Song of Songs asserts that he desires his beloved because she is his best friend–his “sister”– first. It is this platonic and filial love for one’s spouse–i.e., the depth of the friendship one has with one’s spouse–that makes sexual love holy, redeeming it from the clutches of lust, which is merely the desire to use another person as an object of satisfaction.
If your spouse is not your best friend, then your sexual life with your spouse will, de facto, be shallow and disordered, drawing its life more from lust (which is desire deprived of friendship) than from true love.
3. Sacrament and Covenant
Even worse than having a shallow and disordered sexual relationship is the fact that failing to be your spouse’s best friend may well serve as an obstacle to the covenantal and sacramental functions of marriage.  A covenant dictates the very nature of the relationship between two people.  What is the nature of God’s covenant with his people? It is spousal.  “I will betroth you to me forever; I will betroth you in righteousness and justice, in love and compassion” (Hos 2:19).
Likewise, to say that marriage is a sacrament is to say that marriage is not just intended to sanctify the husband and wife but to call the world to sanctity by inviting everyone into a deeper, covenantal relationship with God.  But if one isn’t one’s spouse’s best friend–or worse, isn’t even trying to be–how can marriage be God’s sign to the world of the intimate friendship, indeed, the “best friendship,” Jesus Christ desires with his bride, the Church?  Being best friends with one’s spouse–or at least, actively striving to become best friends with one’s spouse–is, I would argue, a necessary part of fulfilling the sacramental call of marriage.
4. Sour Grapes
My point above about sacrament and covenant is one of the reasons I think articles like the one I’m responding to are so insidious.  I get that a lot of husbands and wives aren’t each other’s best friends–I’m a marriage therapist for heaven’s sake!  But to argue that husbands and wives shouldn’t expect to be each other’s best friends or shouldn’t strive to become each other’s best friends simply damns couples with low expectations (which would be bad enough) and does so in direct contrast to the rather high expectations both Christ and his Church tell couples they have the right to have!  Gaudium Et Spes asserts that marriage is an “intimate partnership” (#48).  What is an intimate partnership if not best friendship?
To be honest, I have a hard time feeling like people who argue this aren’t simply engaging in a bit of sour grapes.   It is easier to say, “Husbands and wives shouldn’t expect to be best friends” than it is to admit, “I don’t know how to be my spouse’s best friend.”   The thing is, that’s a problem that can be solved if a couple is actually taught, first, that it is a problem and, second, how to solve it.  Making a problem go away by claiming it was never a problem in the first place is, to my way of thinking, insidious.
5. In the Beginning
To get back to the meat of the argument though, when we want to know what God’s intentions for our life and relationship are, Jesus tells us to go back to the beginning.  St John Paul II makes this point when he observes that, when questioned about divorce, Jesus said, “Moses permitted divorce because of the hardness of your hearts, but in the beginning it was not so.”  In other words, if you want to know what God the Father’s intentions for humanity are, then you have to look at the way the world was before the Fall, before sin hardened our hearts to living out God’s intentions.
So, what was God’s intention for man and woman in the beginning?  Well, whom did God create to be Adam’s helpmate?  About whom did Adam cry, “At last, this is bone of my bone and flesh of my flesh!”  I have news for you.  It wasn’t his fraternity brother, comrade-at-arms men’s group leader, or drum circle confrere.   It was Eve, his bride; the very person whom God ordained from the beginning to be his best friend.  Eve was  the person to whom Adam could relate to understand as intimately as he understood his very self.  Eve would always stand at Adam’s side because she was created from his side.
6. The Two Shall Be One Flesh
Which brings me to my final point.  All of the sacraments exist to restore the original unity that existed between man, woman and God before the Fall.  Marriage makes man and woman into one flesh so that God can restore the intimate union–the best friendship–between man and woman that existed before sin entered the world and frustrated that friendship.
Jesus says, “Love your neighbor as you love yourself” (Mk 12:31).   Jesus’ presumption here is that we love ourselves best, and our friendship with others should be akin to our desire to work for the good of our own flesh.  Well, in marriage, our spouse becomes one flesh with us.  “The two shall become one” (Mk 10:8).  Through marriage, my spouse becomes myself. “Husbands should love their wives as they love their own bodies. He who loves his wife, loves himself.” (Eph 5:28).
If husband and wife are one flesh how can they fail to be anything but best friends to one another?  Whom do I know better than myself?  Whom do I love better than myself?  My wife is called to be the other part of my very self and vice versa. We are one flesh.  Why should we expect to be anything but best friends to each other?  Why should we not respond to any obstacle to that friendship as anything but sin, or the effects of sin, that we were obliged to strive with all our might to overcome?
Call To Action
Again, I get that husbands and wives are often not each other’s best friends.  That’s to be expected given our fallen nature.  But to suggest that husbands and wives shouldn’t expect to be each others best friends or shouldn’t strive to overcome whatever obstacles stand in the way of that friendship seems, to me, to be a lie of Satan aimed at the heart of the Sacrament of Marriage.  As for me and my house, given the opportunity to take marriage advice from either When Harry Met Sally and John Gray or St. John Paul, St. Paul, and Jesus Christ, we will serve the Lord.
In an age when people would like to redefine marriage into non-existence and trash it in every way imaginable, it seems to me that Catholics need to be bold about making more of marriage, not less.  The Catholic vision of marriage is one that proposes a radical, one-flesh, best friendship.  It proposes a  best friendship that is ordained by God to do the impossible; to make two beings into one, to bring new life into the world, to be a physical reminder of the free, total, faithful, and fruitful love God has for each one of us, and to perfect the husband and wife in grace so that they might be ready to spend eternity celebrating the Heavenly Wedding Feast with the Eternal Bridegroom, our best friend, Jesus Christ.
There can be no better friend than the one who can do these things with me.  That is why my wife and I will always be each other’s best friends and strive to be even better friends to each other every day, so that God’s plan might be fulfilled in our hearts, our lives, and in the world.  I join our Church in wishing the same for every married couple.
If you’d like to learn more about becoming your spouse’s best friend, check out For Better…FOREVER! A Catholic Guide to Lifelong Marriage,   Just Married:  A Catholic Guide to Surviving and Thriving in the First Five Years of Marriage, and Holy Sex!  The Catholic Guide to Toe-Curling, Mind-Blowing, Infallible Loving.

Sunday, 30 November 2014

2015 - Year of Consecrated Life

Pope Francis Has Declared 2015 the Year of Consecrated Life


"They (the consecrated) are men and woman who can awaken the world. Consecrated life is prophecy. God asks us to fly the nest and to be sent to the frontiers of the world, avoiding the temptation to 'domesticate' them. This is the most concrete way of imitating the Lord."

 - Pope Francis

Catholic Herald UK

Francis announces year of consecrated life in 2015

Pope Francis thanked the religious for their 'testimony' (AP)
Pope praises 'spirit of faith' of religious orders


Pope Francis has announced that 2015 will be a year dedicated to the promotion of consecrated life.
He made the announcement today in an address to the heads of men’s religious orders, who were taking part in the 82nd general assembly of the Union of Superiors General in Rome.
During the three-hour meeting the Pope held an impromptu question-and-answer session.

He later thanked the religious, saying: “Thank you, for what you do and for your spirit of faith and your quest for service. Thanks for your testimony, and also for the humiliations you have to endure.”

Wake up the World! - Quotes from Pope Francis Catholic News Service

  • Today’s religious men and women need to be prophetic, “capable of waking up the world,” of showing they are a special breed who “have something to say” to the world today.
  • “The church must be attractive. Wake up the world! Be witnesses of a different way of doing things, acting, living! (Show) it’s possible to live differently in this world.”
  • They need to live and behave in a truly different way, recognizing one’s weakness and sins, but acting with “generosity, detachment, sacrifice, forgetting oneself in order to take care of others.”
  • “It’s necessary to spend time in real contact with the poor. For me this is really important: it’s necessary to know from experience what’s real, to dedicate time going to the periphery to truly know the situation and the life of the people.”
  • Without firsthand experience with people’s lives, “then one runs the risk of being abstract ideologues or fundamentalists, and this is not healthy.”
  •  Year of Consecrated Life FB


Thank you, Sheryl. You are already a living example of a consecrated life. I hope to share in this life with you intimately - a consecrated life together. God Bless you.

Tuesday, 18 November 2014

The Heart of the Family is the Heart of a Nation

This post is for all the fatherless and orphan children in the world. Please take a moment and pray to St. Joseph, stepfather of Jesus, for all the fatherless children out there. Consider sponsoring or mentoring a child who needs you. Sheryl, I praise you for your love and work for the orphans. This article made me think of you and all your dedication to make the world a better place and give hope to the children.  I hope to talk to you soon.

Family Breakdown is Dividing Societies

Top British Rabbi Tells Vatican Conference Family Breakdown is Dividing Societies



A top British rabbi told a Vatican conference on marriage today that Great Britain is developing into the most divided society than at any time in the last 150 years.

Lord Jonathan Sacks, the former chief Rabbi of the United Kingdom, says the problem stems from a number of factors including that almost half of children born in the United Kingdom are born out of wedlock, people are marrying later and that 42 percent of marriages end in divorce.
He pointed out that women head 92 percent of single-parent families and that “in Britain today more than a million children will grow up with no contact whatsoever with their fathers.”
Sacks said, “Those who are privileged to grow up in stable loving association with the two people who brought them into being will, on average, be healthier physically and emotionally. They will do better at school and at work. They will have more successful relationships, be happier and live longer.”
He said that cohabitation is not a substitute for marriage since cohabiting relationships end on average after less than two years, far shorter even than those marriages that end in divorce.
He said these developments are “creating a divide in societies the like of which has not been seen since Disraeli spoke of ‘two nations’ a century and a half ago.”
Sacks is one of many speakers at a Vatican sponsored conference on the “complementarity of men and women” and the importance of marriage and family.
This morning Pope Francis said that children have a right to grow up in a family with a father and a mother.
A common statement on man-woman marriage from more than 14 faith traditions will be released on Wednesday.


Friday, 7 November 2014

National Vocation Week - Catholic Vocations

The first week of November is Vocation Awareness Week for Catholic Vocations. In honor of my girlfriend, Sheryl, I have posted the following from the Franciscan Sisters of Christian Charity. St. Francis took a vow of poverty and believed in good works towards all beings, including animals. He believed all of God's creation to be his brothers and sisters. This week is to honor all those who have consecrated themselves to the work and call of God on their life.

http://franciscanizedworld.fscc-calledtobe.org/2014/11/vocation-awareness-week-hopes-to-wake-up-the-world-to-consecrated-life/

Vocation Awareness Week Hopes to Wake Up the World to Consecrated Life

by Sister Julie Ann on November 2, 2014

Vocation Awareness Week is all about discernment of God’s call. This includes Consecrated Life.  Anticipating the Year of Consecrated Life proclaimed by Pope Francis, Franciscan Sisters of Christian Charity and other religious from the Diocese of Green Bay began this week November 2, 2014 with a prayer service at St. Francis of Assisi Parish on Grand Avenue, Manitowoc, WI.
Mentioning many holy men and women by name, all present  invoked the intercession of the saints, sang inspirational songs, proclaimed the Word of God and recalled words of Pope Francis for this year of joy.
Are you discerning your own call from God? The world needs you. God calls you. We invite you. Listen to our Sisters share more about our unique call from God.



Sunday, 26 October 2014

TheTruth is Revealed... Sister Sheryl is Sister Agnus

Sister Sheryl is not who she claims to be.

Father Elijah has done his inquiry, and it turns out Sister Sheryl's real name is Agnus.  Now that I know her real name, I hopefully will be able to find out more information about her. I am a believer in prophecy and a follower of Fatima, but I do not believe this woman speaks with the voice of God.  Sheryl, if you read this, please try to find out why Sister Agnus has given you a false name.... this in itself is very suspicious.

Tuesday, 14 October 2014

Sheryl, my rose, please be my wife

Sheryl Ruthven,

I would be the happiest man on the planet if you'd become my wife. I remember the first day I saw you in  Our Lady of Lajas church in Medellin, Columbia. You looked like an angel, standing at gates of Eden and I knew that I had taken a vacation that would forever change my life. Since then I have come to know the person that you are, and truly you are as angelic as you look. When we traced the footsteps of Christ in Israel, I envisioned you as the bride of Christ and I imagined some day you would be with me forever. When we re-traced the footsteps of Mary Magdalene in France, I could feel her presence with you, and I knew then that one day we would do the wonderful work of God together, saving the little children and protecting the precious animals.  Since then I have prayed to St. Peter and St. Mark to give me confirmation and they have finally answered me. Mother Eva has also given me her blessing and Father Elijah too. Please do not listen to sister Sheryl, she is a Jezebel and a false prophetess. Father Elijah has inquired of her and found out she is a fake. Her name is not even listed at the convent so she must be using a fake name. She probably used your name to befriend you. She will be removed soon if she has not been already. I have suspicion that she is from that protestant cult down the road and that she is possessed by a demon. I know we are called by God to be together and do His precious work, and that is why the devil has sent her to come against us.  But God is greater than this and he loves us.

I love you, Sheryl - you complete me. All that I need now is to hear from you, "I do" and I will truly be like Adam with his Eve in the Garden of Eden again.