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The Christian Life

March 1, 2022 by Lena {JOYfilledfamily} Filed Under: Lent, The Liturgical Year Leave a Comment

The fundamental rule of Christian life is, as almost every page of the Gospel tells us, that we should live out of the world, separate ourselves from the world, hate the world.

The world is that ungodly land which Abraham, our sublime model, is commanded by God to quit. It is that Babylon of our exile and captivity, where we are beset with dangers.

The beloved disciple cries out to us: ‘Love not the world, nor the things which are in the world. If any man love the world, the charity of the Father is not in him.’

Our most merciful Jesus, at the very time when He was about to offer Himself as a sacrifice for all men, spoke these awful words: ‘I pray not for the world.’

When we were baptized, and signed with the glorious & indelible character of Christians, the condition required/accepted of us, was that we should renounce the works and pomps of the world (expressed under the name of Satan); and this solemn baptismal promise we have often renewed…

The world is everything that is opposed to our Lord, that refuses to recognize Him, and that resists His divine guidance.

Those false maxims which tend to weaken the love of God in our souls; which recommend the vanities that fasten our hearts to this present life; which cry down everything that can raise us above our weaknesses or vices; which decoy and gratify our corrupt nature by dangerous pleasures, which, far from helping us to the attainment of our last end, only mislead us—all these are ‘the world.’

This world is everywhere, and holds a secret league within our very hearts. Sin has brought it into this exterior world created by God for Himself, and has given it prominence. Now, we must conquer it, and trample upon it, or we shall perish with it.

There is no being neutral; we must be its enemies, or its slaves…

Let us also tremble for ourselves; that our courage may not fail us, let us ponder those consoling words, which our Savior…addressed to His eternal Father…: ‘Father! I have given them Thy word, and the world hath hated them, because they are not of the world, as I also am not of the world. I pray not, that Thou shouldst take them out of the world, but that Thou shouldst keep them from evil.’

Dom Prosper Gueranger

A few spiritual reads and journals have been selected. The others will finalize their selections in the next few days, within the Septuagesima Season in preparation for Lent.

What spiritual reading have you selected for this Lent or years past?

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“Spiritual reading is the food of the soul, which renders it dauntless and strong against all temptation, which prompts it with holy thoughts and ardents desires for heaven, which enlightens the mind, strengthens the will, and sites comfort in all afflictions, which, in conclusion, procures that true and holy joy which is found in God alone.” St. Ambrose

Holy Week {in the Home}

March 1, 2022 by Lena {JOYfilledfamily} Filed Under: Holy Week Leave a Comment

This resource has been compiled by a mom/family who attends the Tridentine Mass. It was created with great care but it is not meant to replace Holy Liturgies.  The blessings made in the home following these liturgies are only to provide a learning resource for the family as we observe the most fruitful time of the year as never before – under orders to stay home during this epidemic.  They are not valid blessings — Missa Sicca (Dry Mass).  

We follow the Pre-1955 liturgies for Holy Week.  Below is an overview of our Holy Week Plans.  It does not include any activity/craft that we will be doing with our children.  It’s solely focused on immersing ourselves deeper into the liturgies and ceremonies of this holy week.  We did not create any printable as holy religious have already done so. The booklets are linked with each week.  

Some commentary (based on Regina Coeli House) is provided on this sheet.  It is to be used in union with the commentary (of Blessed Adolph Schuster) provided in the linked booklets.  The linked booklets for the traditional liturgies are in Latin & English.  We will adapt our home observance based on both commentaries and the liturgies.   

The head of the home (Dad) and boys will be serving as priests/deacons/altar servers.   Mom and daughters will not be serving in any of these roles (aside from singing when needed) even though it is a Dry Mass and informal ceremonies.  

You will also find a brief list of items that you could collect around your home to assist in your observance of this Holy Week at Home.  

Please remember that perfection is not needed, do what works best for your family, and is within your means.   The ultimate goal is to unite ourselves with Holy Mother Church while going deeper into Her liturgies so we can grow spiritually in this time of sorrow.   May this be the most fruitful time of the year for us as Holy Mother Church desires it to be.  (Dates will vary per year. The dates listed were for 2020.)

SUPPLIES:

  • Palm, Olive, or other Tree Branches (PS)
  • Holy Water (to bless palms) (PS)
  • Incense (PS)
  • 2 Pilar/Taper Candles (PS, GF)
  • Veiled Crucifix on long stick/pole (PS) We tape a metal crucifix to a wooden walking stick cover with purple fabric.
  • Spiritual reading/prayer book (HT) (for perpetual Adoration before the family Enthronement of the Sacred Heart of Jesus) 
  • Olive Oil (HT, EV)
  • Towel (HT)
  • Bowl (HT)
  • Water (HT)
  • Wooden clapper (HT)  (two wooden spoons) 
  • Fire/Fire Pit (GF)
  • Crucifix (GF) (Veneration/Adoration of the Cross) We will use the family crucifix that has been veiled for all of Passiontide.
  • Purple cloth (GF)
  • Paschal Candle (GF)
  • Holy Water Font (GF)
  • 3 Prong Candle & Base (EV)  (The Triple Candle is a “reed” with three candles or if possible one candle that branches into three, which represents the Holy Trinity.  The reformed Holy Week replaced this with the Paschal Candle. At each Lumen Christi one of the candles atop the reed is lit.) We will use 3 pillar candles on a rod iron base.
  • Bells (EV)
  • Altar & Linens (all days)
  • Pre-1955 Missal – St. Andrew’s Missal for Sacred Triduum   – or- 
  • Hebdomada Sancta (Holy Week)  booklets (linked below, provided by Pre-1955Holymass.com)
  • Spiritual Communion Prayers – offered daily

PS – Palm Sunday | HT – Holy Thursday | GF – Good Friday | EV – Easter Vigil

This is the blessed time which separated the law of severity from the law of grace; which accomplished that of which the voices of the Prophets had sung hundreds of years before; which abolished the parochial Synagogue and gave birth to the Universal Church; which saw the institution of the most august of the Sacraments and the fulfillment of what is most sublime and most tender of those which the most providential God had established for human nature, miserably outraged by the sin of the first man. 

It is no wonder, then, if the Catholic Church, in this precious time, uses more elaborate ceremony, deeper piety and veneration, and more numerous and salutary institutions and practices than in all the rest of the year. Holy Mother Church, – in this Week, – blesses and renews the Oil that must sanctify her temples and consecrate her Ministers; she cleans the Altars, on which she offers every day the Flesh of the Immaculate Lamb which nourishes and sanctifies her; she blesses and renews the water which must render her fruitful, and the fire which must enlighten her. This loving Mother did not hold back any care in preparing her children to celebrate worthily the Death and Resurrection of the Saviour and making them worthy of the immense fruits of this mystery.   ~ Blessed Adolph Schuster


April 5  PALM SUNDAY

Blessing of Palms, Procession, and Holy Mass 9:30 am

Palm Sunday Play List for the Home 

Sprinkle palms with holy water, bless them with incense in preparation for their distribution.

Receive palms kneeling and kiss the hand of the Priest before taking your blessed palm.

The procession will await before the closed front door, chanting of the Gloria, laus et honor Tibi sit before the cross-bearer knocks on the door thrice, then the doors (symbolizing the gates of heaven) are opened and the servers, celebrant (representing Christ taking possession of His kingdom) and the faithful enter into the Church (signifying the Heavenly Jerusalem).

We will recite the blessing for the palms, distribute them, and process around our home.  Then we will begin to offer our MIssa Sicca for Palm Sunday.  

Replacing the usual Gospel reading, three deacons chant St. Matthew’s account of the dolorous Passion of Our Savior, whose text are divided into three parts: the Christus (Christ), the Chronista (the narrator) and the Synagoga (the Synagogue, a combination of Judas, the Jews, Pontius Pilate, the soldiers and other ridiculers).

April 6

Monday of Holy Week

April 7 

Tuesday of Holy Week

April 8

Wednesday of Holy Week – Spy Wednesday

Sung Tenebrae 6:30 pm

April 9  MAUNDY THURSDAY

Chrism Mass 9:00  am

Holy Thursday Mass, Eucharistic Procession to Altar of Repose, Stripping of Altar 7:00 pm

Tenebrae for Holy Thursday

Holy Thursday Though plunged into sorrow on Palm Sunday, a brief glimpse of joy is seen on Maundy Thursday, so named after the Mandatum ceremony (or washing of the feet) that occurs on this day during which Our Lord declared, “A new commandment I give to you,” referring to the supernatural charity that should bind mankind. This is also the day on which Christ instituted the priesthood and the Holy Sacrifice of the Mass.  While the Last Supper is commemorated in the evening, the elaborate Chrismal Mass is celebrated in the morning hours by the diocesan bishop in his cathedral during which the holy oils of chrism, catechumens and extreme unction are consecrated.

Chrism Mass – morning

After the Consecration but just before concluding the Canon, the Mass is paused and a subdeacon, accompanied by acolytes, brings a violet-covered ampulla (vase) containing olive oil to the table, the bishop consecrates to become the Oleum Infirmorum for administering the sacrament of Extreme Unction.

After Communion, the bishop returns to the table and the ministers of the oils make a procession to and from the sacristy to bring the ampullae containing the olive oil for first making the sacred chrism, followed by the oil of catechumens. The Bishop stirs the fragrant balsam with a little olive oil before pouring the mixture into the vase.

The bishop then breaths the sign of the cross three times upon the mixture, an action that each of the twelve priests repeat. Afterward, the bishop sings three times (each in a higher tone) “Ave, Sanctum Chrisma,” finally kissing the vase’s side.

The Oleum Catechumenorum is consecrated in the same manner (but without the addition of basalm).  The Mass is concluded with Ite, missa est, chanted by the deacon facing the ministers and faithful.

We will set out oil and offer instruction about the Chrism Mass.

Holy Thursday Mass – evening 

The Mass does not include the ceremony during which the celebrant washes the feet of twelve men as the Divine Master did to His Apostles. This is completed outside the sanctuary in a separate ceremony.

We will do the washing of feet before Mass in the kitchen.  

Twelve men will have their feet washed during the Mandatum, ceremony that signifies humility, charity and the cleansing power of grace upon the soul.

The celebrant wears an apron, pours the water over the right foot, and then he washes the foot.

We will begin our Missa Sicca

Commemorates the First Mass offered by Our Lord Jesus Christ in anticipation of His Crucifixion.

In the lower chapel, two altar servers light the candles at the altar of repose during Communion in preparation for the Translation of the Blessed Sacrament.

When Mass is concluded, the Blessed Sacrament is removed to the altar of repose, where a vigil is kept until midnight, signifying Our Lord’s agony in the garden. Before the ceremonies are completed though, the Diviserunt (or stripping of the altars) takes place.

Having placed the Sanctissimum at the altar of repose, the ministers removed their upper vestments and then proceeded to strip the altars completely leaving just the veiled altar cross and two candles. The deacon removes the altar cloths while the servers wait to receive them.

The high altar is stripped.

Compline immediately follows.

We will pray Tenebrae for Holy Thursday.  All family members, including children, will take time to sit before our Lord/Enthronement of the Sacrament Heart of Jesus and Adoration until midnight.  

Where possible, in order to engender the liturgical mood of having lost the Real Presence in the church, the altar of repose should be out of view and closed to the public after midnight on Holy Thursday. 

April 10  GOOD FRIDAY

Stations of the Cross 1:30 pm

Good Friday Liturgy 3:00 pm

Followed by Sung Tenebrae for Good Friday

Good Friday – Extreme sorrow for Our Lord’s Passion penetrates the unique ceremonies of the Solemn Afternoon Liturgy for Good Friday, during which many practices of the ancient form of the Roman Mass can be witnessed. Mixed in with the austere Roman character of this liturgical rite are some Eastern influences, namely the Veneration of the Cross (derived from a custom practiced in Jerusalem with the True Cross).

Having processed in silence into the sanctuary, the celebrant and deacon immediately make the Solemn Prostration. This profound act of reverence is made instead of genuflecting, to demonstrate the extreme sorrow and the sacred ministers’ sense of unworthiness to officiate at the altar due to their faults.

Following the old Roman Mass structure, here a lector from the schola chants the first of the two lessons that proceed the Passion (which replaces the Gospel). 

After the lessons, responsories, and prayers, three deacons bow before the bishop at his throne and request his permission to chant the Passion related by the Beloved Disciple, who was an actual eyewitness of Christ’s crucifixion.

After the Passion is sung, the deacon brings in the veiled cross flanked by two acolytes carrying candles in preparation for its veneration by all in the chapel. 

We will place the cross on a purple cloth on the floor to be venerated by each family member.  

With the assistance of the deacon and subdeacon, the priest implores everyone to “look upon the wood of the cross upon which the Savior of the world hung.” In sorrowful fervor, the faithful reply: “Come, let us adore,” and kneel in common veneration.

Having given away the cross to two acolytes (while the other two acolytes placed their candles on the edges of the predella), the celebrant removes his shoes, then performs the “creeping to the cross” ritual of genuflecting three times while approaching the cross from afar to kiss the foot of the Crucified Savior.

While the faithful venerate the cross, the master of ceremonies removes the violet veil from the altar cross.  Then the veils from the side chapels’ altars, and finally the large rood cross.

Remove all veils from crucifixes and holy images. 

Vestments are changed from black to violet.

Tenebrae – During the Sacred Triduum, the canonical hours of Matins and Lauds are specially merged into “Tenebrae,” meaning “shadow” or “darkness,” deriving its name not only from one of the responsories sung, but also from the gradual darkness that envelops the church as the candles are extinguished after the recitation of each psalm. After Tenebrae on Good Friday, the church lights are extinguished, signifying the world’s sorrow for the crucifixion and death of Our Savior, and not relit until the entrance of the Paschal Candle during the Easter Vigil.

All candles are extinguished on the Tenebrae hearse, a special candelabra that holds 15 candles, the last representing Our Lord which remains lit until the very end…

…When it is hidden behind the altar (a symbol of Our Lord’s closed tomb; indeed the first Christian altars were built upon the tombs of the martyrs) signifying Christ’s impending Resurrection. 

We will extinguish all candles aside from one and turn off all the lights in our home.  The lights will remain off until we pray the Easter Vigil. One candle will remain lit to represent Christ.  It will be placed behind a missal on our family altar.  

April 11

Holy Saturday Tenebrae

Easter Vigil 7:00 pm

Paschal Vigil – The priest blesses with holy water the Paschal Fire which set against the black of night, vividly demonstrates how the Christ, the Light of the World, dispels the Devil’s darkness. The fire will next be incensed, using coals that were retrieved from the blessed fire.

Surrounded by the smoke of the newly-blessed Paschal Fire, the priest prepares to incise the Paschal Candle with symbols representing Christ, namely the cross, the Greek letters of the Alpha (A) and Omega (Ω) and His five wounds, as well as the year’s numerals (2020), signifying His reign in the present and for eternity

The priest prays: “Light of Christ gloriously resurgent, dispel the darkness of hearts and minds.”

We will have a fire on the front porch and light our 3-pronged candle.

Entering the darkened church, the deacon carries  in the Paschal Candle/3 Pronged Candle while chanting three times, each in an ascending tone, “Lumen Christi!” to which all genuflect in veneration and reply, “Deo gratias!” 

After the chanting of the Exulstet, four lessons, some responsories and prayers, and the chanting of the first part of the Litany of the Saints, the baptismal water is then blessed. Having already sung the preface style prayer and performed several blessings, the priest plunges three successive times the lighted Paschal Candle while praying: “May the power of the Holy Ghost descend in fullness upon this font.

We will bless the family’s holy water font.

Just consecrated on Holy Thursday, the new holy oils of chrism and of catechumens are successively, then simultaneously, poured into the specially blessed water in the sign of the cross. Now the year’s supply of baptismal water has been prepared.

We will put the oils out.

As occurred in many chapels, having made the regenerative waters of baptism, the priest may prepare to baptize several adult catechumens into the Catholic Faith. Catechumens is baptized by the priest into the Mystical Body of Christ.  A newly-baptized adult will receive a white garment which in the ancient Church would be worn by the Christian neophytes from the Easter Vigil until the next Sunday, hence its title Dominica in Albis.

We will offer our Missa Sicca for the Easter Vigil and pray Vespers.  

Mass begins with prayers at foot of the Altar.  Mass ends with Vespers.

Download Holy Week at Home

My Holy Week Missal

February 24, 2022 by Lena {JOYfilledfamily} Filed Under: Holy Week, Lent Leave a Comment

Here’s a resource to help little ones go deeper into Christ’s Passion & Holy Week Liturgies.

My Holy Week Missal – Holy Week for Children 96 pages (5.25×7) of beautiful illustrations and simple explanations to help your child understand and follow the Holy Week ceremonies. This is the English translation of the French work “Ma Semaine Saint” published by Editions Saint Pierre-Julien Eymard. It can be found at Angelus Press. (Use the Code Lent2022 for 20% off your order – only good for a limited time.)

This is a missal for the Tridentine Mass. Note that it follows the post-1955 Holy Week liturgies/ceremonies.

Below are readings from this children’s missal. Your children can follow along with your own missal. May they have a fruitful Holy Week!

My Holy Week Missal – Palm Sunday
My Holy Week Missal — Holy Thursday
My Holy Week Missal – Good Friday
My Holy Week Missal – Holy Saturday
My Holy Week Missal – Easter Midnight Mass

Lenten Calendar 2022

February 19, 2022 by Lena {JOYfilledfamily} Filed Under: Lent, Lenten Calendar, Prints Leave a Comment

Ash Wednesday is March 2 this year. Septuagesima in 2022 started on Sunday, February 13. Septuagesima is the season that preludes to the penitential mortifications of Lent and is a time to prepare.

The Church, therefore, has instituted a preparation for the holy time of Lent. She gives us the three weeks of Septuagesima, during which she withdraws us, as much as may be, from the noisy distractions of the world, in order that our hearts may be the more readily impressed by the solemn warning she is to give us, at the commencement of Lent, by marking our foreheads with ashes.

The Liturgical Year by Dom Guéranger, Septuagesima

This Lenten Calendar was created several years ago and my children insist that we have it every Lent. It’s not grand by any means but it goes to show that a simple visual can have a great impact on all ages. I encourage you to find what your family can be fond of as you set to grow closer to Christ in Lent.

Pictured: Lenten calendar from a previous year

Please do not think that your Lenten plans must be extravagant or lengthy. There are many fruits to be found in a simple rhythm during all seasons, especially in the most penitential season of the year.

The institution of Lent is thus brought before us with everything that can impress the mind with its solemn character and with its power to appease God and purify our souls. Look beyond the little world that surrounds us and see how the entire Christian universe is, at this very time, offering forty days’ penance as a sacrifice of propitiation to the offended Majesty of God.

Abbot Gueranger, O.S.B.’s The Liturgical Year.

As always, you are invited to use this Lenten Calendar for your personal use.

This Lenten Calendar is available for FREE as are all my printables. You may offer something if you wish but it is not required or expected. My family is convicted to share the Faith and all that has helped us along, freely.

  • You may download and print the calendar for your personal use.
  • You may also link to this post but please do not link directly to the file download.
  • Email me at JOYfilledfamily{at}gmail{dot}com if you need my assistance.  
  • This year’s calendar prints best as 11×17 or 24×36. 
    • Staples offers inexpensive printing options. The colored prints can be printed on 65-63 lb 11×17 cardstock for less than $2. The BW Calendar can be printed as a 24×36 “Blue Print” ($3.80) – It’s thin paper but large and easy to read.

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Includes 3 variations of the 2022 Lenten Calendar!

O most benign Jesus! who didst so desire to suffer for us, grant, that we may willingly suffer for love of Thee; that we may hate and flee from the detestable pleasures of the world and the flesh, and practice penance and mortification, that by so doing we may merit to be released from our spiritual blindness to love Thee more and more ardently, and finally possess Thee forever.

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2022 Lenten Calendar Guide:

  • The bottom portion of each day represents the feasts and ferias proper to the season for the Extraordinary Form
  • Saints listed without a notation are from the 1962 Calendar
  • Saints are listed on Feria Days so we can invoke their intercession on their patronal feastday.
  • Saints listed with “H” are from the Historical Calendar
  • Each saint featured by a picture is identified by the name immediately above the image
  • This calendar is the work of a lay Catholic for one’s personal observance of Lent and private devotions

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Below are FREE Lenten Resources

Lenten Resources for Children:

  • Printable Lenten Plan – Blank for all ages
  • Lent Planning Worksheet – Rorate Caeli
  • Empty Tomb Garden 
  • Lenten Family Joy Journal
  • Stations of the Cross Candles 
  • Resurrection Eggs
  • Stations of the Cross for Children & Stations of the Cross Box – Family, Feast, and Feria
  • Stations of the Cross Coloring Booklet – Catholic Playground
  • Stations of the Cross Coloring Page – Catholic Playground

Lenten Spiritual Reading & Sermons:

  • The Gospels for Lent and the Passion of Christ : readings at divine service during the forty days of Lent with short meditations for the faithful
  • Lent and Holy Week : chapters on Catholic observance and ritual
  • Meditations for Lent from St. Thomas Aquinas
  • Homilies for Lent from the Church Fathers – audio: part 1, part 2, part 3, part 4, part 5
  • FREE Traditional Catholic Books

Purification of the B.V.M.

February 2, 2022 by Lena {JOYfilledfamily} Filed Under: 02 February Saints, Candlemas, Purification of the Blessed Virgin Mary Leave a Comment

Happy feast of the Purification of the Blessed Virgin Mary!

Heavenly Father! look down from Thy throne of mercy upon the face of Thy Anointed in whom Thou art well pleased. Behold, He is this day offered to Thee in the temple for the sins of His brethren. Let this offering please Thee, and move Thee to have compassion on us sinners. In consideration of His humility and obedience, forgive us our pride and disobedience, and grant us, that purified by His blood, we may one day, having like Simeon departed this life in peace, behold Thee as the eternal Light which shall never be extinguished in the temple of Thy glory, be presented to Thee by Mary, our beloved Mother, and love and praise Thee forever. Amen. #frleonardgoffine

The Tridentine Mass

January 8, 2022 by Lena {JOYfilledfamily} Filed Under: Archbishop Vigano, Holy Mass, Libertas Leave a Comment

It is enough to simply know the ratio legis to be able to reject Traditionis Custodes as an ideological and partisan document, drawn up by vindictive and intolerant people, full of vain ambition and gross canonical errors, with the intention of prohibiting a rite canonized by two thousand years of Saints and Pontiffs and in its place imposing a spurious one, copied from the Lutherans and patched up by the modernists, which in fifty years has caused a terrible disaster to the ecclesial body and which, precisely because of its devastating effectiveness, cannot permit any exceptions. Here there is not only fault: there is also malice and the twofold betrayal of the Divine Lawgiver as well as the faithful.

Bishops, priests, religious, and laity find themselves once again having to make a choice of side: either with the Catholic Church and its two-thousand-year-old and immutable doctrine, or with the conciliar and Bergoglian Church, with its errors and its secularized rites. And this happens in a paradoxical situation in which the Catholic Church and her counterfeit coincide in the same Hierarchy, which the faithful feel they must obey as an expression of God’s authority and at the same time they must disobey as treacherous and rebellious…

To think that the same Holy Mass, for which missionaries sent to Protestant lands or priests imprisoned in the gulags risked their lives, is today forbidden by the Holy See is a cause of pain and scandal, as well as an offense to the Martyrs who defended that Mass to the last breath. But these things can only be understood by those who believe, who love, and who hope. Only by those who live by God. – Archbishop Vigano

Christmastide

December 31, 2021 by Lena {JOYfilledfamily} Filed Under: 12 December, Christmas, The Liturgical Year Leave a Comment

Christmas continues (despite what the world declares) and we remain at the Crib of Jesus, our Master.

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In the mystery of Christmastide, this Light is given to us, so to speak, softened down; our weakness required that it should be so.

It is indeed the Divine Word, the Wisdom of the Father, that we are invited to know and imitate; but this Word, this Wisdom, are shown us under the appearance of a Child.

Let nothing keep us from approaching him.

We might fear were he seated on a throne in his palace; but he is lying on a crib in a stable!

Were it the time of his Fatigues, his Bloody Sweat, his Cross, his Burial, or even of his Glory and his Victory, we might say we had not courage enough: but what courage is needed to go near him in Bethlehem, where all is sweetness and silence, and a simple Little Babe!

Come to him, says the Psalmist, and he enlightened!

O happy Crib of Bethlehem!

–Dom Prosper Gueranger

Christmas 2021

December 31, 2021 by Lena {JOYfilledfamily} Filed Under: 12 December, Christmas, Christmas Card Leave a Comment

Merry Christmas!

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Blessed art Thou, O new-born Savior, who hast descended from on high to teach me the ways of justice, hast become man and equal to me.

In return for this goodness of Thine, I renounce all evil, all sinful desires, words, and deeds. In return for Thy love, I will ever uproot from my heart all carnal desires, and always live soberly, justly, and godly; do Thou by Thy grace, strengthen me in this resolve. #frleonardgoffine

St. Lucia

December 31, 2021 by Lena {JOYfilledfamily} Filed Under: 12 December Saints, St. Lucia, St. Lucy, Uncategorized Leave a Comment

Dad has Scandinavian & Italian blood but we celebrate this glorious feast day because we are Catholic and seek the intercession of our beloved St. Lucia.

We seek to use the beautiful customs which have been inspired by the liturgical customs to inspire our family to make a feast day marvelous — to give greater glory to God and a special saint.

And sometimes it’s super simple — store-bought donuts and a reading of the saint’s life (as pictured from last year’s celebration).

May it all lift our minds to Heaven where the Saint of Light sings in the glorious Choir of Virgins.

May all the feast day celebrations in our homes be a way to invite Heaven to work miracles again for the faithful through the intercession of the members of the Church Triumphant, the Saints — our modest attempt to restore Christendom within our own families.

SANTA LUCIA, ORA PRO NOBIS.

This year we will have a simple brunch at 10 am after our children’s first lessons of the day. We will turn on our tree lights in the house and the candles in the windows. We will offer our family rosary & Advent devotions earlier so we can make our first trip to see Christmas lights in town while enjoying a hot drink & treat.

The drive ended with Compline. Dad tucks them into bed and we will return to our normal Advent Plans – awaiting the Christ-child with our set out penance, devotions, and an exterior reflective of our interior.

Real Martyrs

December 16, 2021 by Lena {JOYfilledfamily} Filed Under: Archbishop Vigano, Libertas Leave a Comment

“I have told you these things, so that in Me you may have peace. In this world you will have trouble. But take heart! I have overcome the world (John 16:33).

To those who are suffering their own discrimination and the one of their beloved ones;

to those who were forced to take a *#!!+^#•+^ because the civil authority shamefully blackmailed them, with the outrageous complicity of the ecclesial authority;

to those who with courage refuse to surrender to illegitimate and tyrannical laws;

to those who are deprived of their means of support due to their coherence, I say this:

YOU are the proof that the strength and the violence of Evil can possibly affect you in your belongings, in your body and in your family; but they cannot ever, ever, strip away from you the peace of having stayed loyal to the Lord.

Do you think that the martyrs were people gifted with special powers?

The real martyrs were, are, and will be persons like you and I, persons with a thousand flaws maybe, but driven by the love for Christ, that is, driven by Charity, who are ready to sacrifice their lives in order to not renounce that supernatural and divine love.

And if they were able, with the help of God, to face death accompanied by horrible pains, do you think that you today are not able, under the mantle of the most holy Virgin Mary, to stand up against these tyrants, as cruel as they are cowardly?

Feel honored by the privilege that is granted to you of meriting Heaven: your fidelity, your strength against the impositions of a hostile power, will merit you the help and protection of Heaven even in the littlest things.

Remain in the Grace of God, which is the only good that no one can ever take away from you: all the rest will be in the hands of Her whom we invoke as the Help of Christians. And when the Virgin intervenes, Hell trembles.

Taken from an interview with Archbishop Vigano

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Hi! I'm Lena, mama of JOYfilledfamily.
We are a traditional Catholic family striving to live for Jesus Christ in everything we do. We pray to completely surrender our will to His and to become His servants. Our mission of this blog is to share our JOY.

This blog serves as a journal of us making good memories, living the liturgical year, and our spiritual journey.

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