Monday, November 07, 2011

Saturday, September 17, 2011

YouCat





FOREWORD POPE BENEDICT XVI


Dear young friends!


Today I recommend for your reading an unusual book. It is unusual both because of its content and because of the way it came to be. I would like to tell you a little about how it was written, because then it will be clear why it is so unusual. You could say that it came to be from another work, whose origins go back to the 1980s. It was a difficult time for the Church and for society worldwide. New guidance was needed to find the path to the future. After the Second Vatican Council (1962-1965) and in a changed cultural situation, many people were confused about what Christians actually believe, what the Church teaches, whether in fact she can teach anything at all, and how everything can find its place in a culture that had changed from its very foundations. Is it still reasonable today to be a believer? These were the questions that even good Christians were asking. At that time Pope John Paul II made a bold decision. He decided that bishops from all over the world should together write a book in which they would answer these questions. He gave me the task of coordinating the work of the bishops and seeing to it that from the contributions of the bishops a book would result—a real book, not just a haphazard collection of all sorts of documents. This book would have the old-fashioned title Catechism of the Catholic Church but would be something entirely new and exciting. It would show what the Catholic Church believes today and how one can with good reason believe.




I was alarmed by this task. I must admit that I doubted whether something like this could succeed. For how was it possible that authors scattered all over the world could together produce a readable book? How could men who not only geographically but also intellectually and spiritually lived on different continents create a text with an inner unity, one that would also be understandable throughout all those continents? And there was the further difficulty that these bishops would not be writing as individual authors but would be in contact with their brother bishops and with the people in their dioceses. I must admit that even today it still seems to me to be a miracle that this project finally succeeded. We met for a week three or four times a year and vigorously discussed the different individual sections that had taken shape in between meetings. First, of course, we had to determine the structure of the book. It had to be simple so that the individual groups of authors that we established would have a clear task and would not have to force their work into a complicated system. It is the same structure you will find in this book. It is simply taken from centuries of catechetical experience: What we believe—How we should celebrate the Christian mysteries—How we have life in Christ—How we should pray. I will not describe now how we slowly made our way through so many and varied questions until finally a book came from it all. One can, of course, criticize some things or even many things in such a work: Everything that man makes is inadequate and can be improved. Still it is a marvelous book: a witness to unity in diversity. We were able to form a single choir from many voices because we had the same score, the faith that the Church has borne through the centuries from the apostles onward. Why am I telling you all this? We realized at the time we were working on the book that not only are the continents and cultures diverse, but that even within individual communities there are again diverse “continents”: The worker thinks differently from the farmer; a physicist differently from a philologist; an executive differently from a journalist; a young man differently from an old man. So we had to find a way of thinking and speaking that was in some way above all these differences, a common space, so to speak, between different worlds of thought. In doing this it became ever more apparent to us that the text needed to be “translated” for different cultural worlds in order to reach people in those worlds in ways that correspond to their own questions and ways of thinking. In the World Youth Days since the introduction of the Catechism of the Catholic Church—Rome, Toronto, Cologne, Sydney—young people from all over the world have come together, young people who want to believe, who are seeking God, who love Christ, and who want fellowship on their journey. In this context the question arose: Should we not attempt to translate the Catechism of the Catholic Church into the language of young people? Should we not bring its great riches into the world of today’s youth? Of course, there are many differences even among the youth of today’s world. And so now, under the capable direction of the Archbishop of Vienna, Christoph Cardinal Schönborn, YOUCAT has been produced for young people. I hope that many young people will let themselves be fascinated by this book.



Many people say to me: The youth of today are not interested in this. I disagree, and I am certain that I am right. The youth of today are not as superficial as some think. They want to know what life is really all about. A detective story is exciting because it draws us into the destiny of other men, a destiny that could be ours. This book is exciting because it speaks of our own destiny and so deeply engages every one of us. So I invite you: Study this Catechism! That is my heartfelt desire. This Catechism was not written to please you. It will not make life easy for you, because it demands of you a new life. It places before you the Gospel message as the pearl of great value” (Mt 13:46) for which you must give everything. So I beg you: Study this Catechism with passion and perseverance. Make a sacrifice of your time for it! Study it in the quiet of your room; read it with a friend; form study groups and networks; share with each other on the Internet. By all means continue to talk with each other about your faith. You need to know what you believe. You need to know your faith with that same precision with which an IT specialist knows the inner workings of a computer. You need to understand it like a good musician knows the piece he is playing. Yes, you need to be more deeply rooted in the faith than the generation of your parents so that you can engage the challenges and temptations of this time with strength and determination. You need God’s help if your faith is not going to dry up like a dewdrop in the sun, if you want to resist the blandishments of consumerism, if your love is not to drown in pornography, if you are not going to betray the weak and leave the vulnerable helpless. If you are now going to apply yourselves zealously to the study of the Catechism, I want to give you one last thing to accompany you: You all know how deeply the community of faith has been wounded recently through the attacks of the evil one, through the penetration of sin itself into the interior, yes, into the heart of the Church. Do not make that an excuse to flee from the face of God! You yourselves are the Body of Christ, the Church! Bring the undiminished fire of your love into this Church whose countenance has so often been disfigured by man. “Never flag in zeal, be aglow with the Spirit, serve the Lord!” (Rom 12:11). When Israel was at the lowest point in her history, God called for help, not from the great and honored ones of Israel, but from a young man by the name of Jeremiah. Jeremiah felt overwhelmed: “Ah, Lord God! Behold, I do not know how to speak, for I am only a youth” (Jer 1:6). But God was not to be deterred: “Do not say, ‘I am only a youth’; for to all to whom I send you you shall go, and whatever I command you you shall speak” (Jer 1:7). I bless you and pray each day for all of you.


by Pope Benedict XVI


Schoenborn, Christoph Cardinal (2011-06-15). YOUCAT. Ignatius Press.


Christ is mysteriously but really present in the ?SACRAMENT of the ?EUCHARIST. As often as the ?CHURCH fulfills Jesus’ command, “Do this in remembrance of me” (1 Cor 11:24), breaks the bread and offers the chalice, the same thing takes place today that happened then: Christ truly gives himself for us, and we truly gain a share in him. The unique and unrepeatable sacrifice of Christ on the Cross is made present on the altar; the work of our redemption is accomplished. [1362-1367]
Schoenborn, Christoph Cardinal (2011-06-15). YOUCAT Ignatius Press.




Sunday, September 04, 2011

Your-Turn



We are delighted to announce that 'You Turn', the latest Album of Rexband is now available across online stores around the world. The Album is now available on the iTunes stores .


I am also attaching links to the Amazon and iTunes stores.

I request you to buy the album, write reviews and share these links with your friends.
May Christus Rex be glorified.

Peace.
Shelton Pinheiro

Thursday, June 30, 2011

Lectio Divina with Archbishop Collins


His Grace, Archbishop Thomas Collins, Archbishop of Toronto, leads the
congregation at St. Michael's Cathedral in the Archdiocese of Toronto during
Lectio Divina.



Lectio Divina - March 2011 - Part 1



Lectio Divina - March 2011 - Part 2



Lectio Divina - March 2011 - Part 3



Lectio Divina - June 2011 - Part 1



Lectio Divina - June 2011 - Part 2



Lectio Divina - June 2011 - Part 2

Saturday, January 01, 2011

Jesus Youth Jubilee 2010



Jesus Youth Jubilee 2010 Conference - Dec 28 to Jan 1,2011

























Radiating Christ:
A Prayer of Cardinal John Henry Newman


DEAR JESUS,
Help me to spread Your fragrance everywhere I go. Flood my soul with Your spirit and life. Penetrate and possess my whole being so utterly that all my life may only be a radiance of Yours. Shine through me and be so in me that every soul I come in contact with may feel Your presence in my soul.

Let them look up and see no longer me but only Jesus!

Stay with me and then I shall begin to shine as You shine, so to shine as to be a light to others;
the light, O JESUS, will be all from You;
none of it will be mine: it will be You shining on others through me. Let me thus praise You in the way You love best: by shining on those around me.

Let me preach You without preaching, not by words, but by my example, by the catching force, the sympathetic influence of what I do, the evident fullness of the love my heart bears for You.

AMEN.
























Who is at frame 6:28 of this song ?
















Revelation 3:20
"If any man hear My voice, and open the door, I will come in to him." (Revelation 3:20)




























5A's for Jesus Youth
1.Abandonment to God
2.Adortion of God
3.Animation of God
4.Action of God
5.Adventure of God
(Salvatore Martinez)

Jesus Youth Canada Library carry this book
Self-Abandonment to Divine Providence by Father J.P de Caussade.
Book Contents
The Virtue of Self-Abandonment
The State of Self-Abandonment
Letters on the practice of Self-Abandonment
The Esteem and Love of Self-Abandonment
The Practice of the Virtue of Self-Abandonment
Obstacles to Self-Abandonment
First Ordeal of Souls Called to the State of Self-Abandonment -
Aridity,Helplessness,Aversion
New Ordeals - Sufferings,Afflictions,Privations
Consequences of Ordeals - Fear of God's Disfavour
Ultimate Ordeals - Agony and Mystical Death - Their Fruits
Spiritual Counsels

the doctrine of St.Francis:
It is love which, entering into a soul to make it happily die to itself
and live to God,breaves it all human desires.....Theotimus,he who
has forsaken all for God ought to resume nothing but according to God's
good pleasure... God commanded the prophet Isaias to strip himself naked
and he did so... and then,the time prefixed by God having expired,
he resumed his clothes.Even so are we to ... die with our Saviour naked
upon the cross. and rise again with him in newness of life.

Taken from Self-Abandonment to Divine Providence - Intro

Doctrine of St.John of Cross,
To do all this in a holy manner,
you have but to change your heart.
What is meant by the heart is the will.
Taken from Self-Abandonment to Divine Providence - Intro