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Happy Mother’s Day

May 12, 2013 by Lena {JOYfilledfamily} Filed Under: 05 May, GFG, Mother's Day 5 Comments

JOYfilledfamily GFG 201318 years, 11 months, 2 days (6911 days to be exact) of motherhood — BLESSED!

I pray for His grace to serve my family as though they were Christ – Mt 25:40 — be faithful always – Rm 4:16 — glorify Him with all that I have been given, no matter what – Jn 15:8 — remain humble – 2 Chronicles 7:14 — radiate His love and share His JOY – Gal 5:22

Happy Mother’s Day to ALL the beautiful women that have entered my life. May God abundantly bless you!

"Keep the JOY of loving God in your heart and share this JOY with all you meet especially your family. Be holy – let us pray."

~ Bl. Mother Teresa

Rogation Day ~ To Petition Earnestly

May 8, 2013 by Lena {JOYfilledfamily} Filed Under: 05 May, Procession, Rogation Day Leave a Comment

“Amen, amen I say to you: if you ask the Father any thing in my name, he will give it you”. ~John 16:23

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The Rogation Days consist of plaintive litanies to God and the saints chanted while the faithful proceed through town and country and the priest blesses their land and property. These processions*, which are penitential in character, end with Mass.

There are two sets of Rogation Days. The first, called the “Major” or “Greater” Litanies, is celebrated on April 25th. The second, called the “Minor” or “Lesser” Litanies, is celebrated on the three days immediately preceding Ascension Thursday.

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Fr. B  Rogation Day 5.7.13

Why do we go around the fields in processions? To beg God to bless the fields with His fatherly hand, to give and preserve the fruits of the earth, and as He fills the animals with blessings, and gives them food at the proper time, so may He give to as also our necessary food.  ~Instruction Concerning the Procession of Rogation Days, Rev. Fr. Leonard Goffine’s The Church’s Year

Rogation Procession 5.7.13

With what intentions should we take part in a procession?  With the intention of glorifying God, of thanking Him for all. His graces, and of obtaining aid and comfort from Him in all our corporal and spiritual needs; with the view of professing our faith openly before the whole world, and with the sincere resolution of always following Christ, the Crucified, in the path of penance and mortification. He who entertains other intentions and takes part, perhaps, for temporal advantages, or for sinful pleasures, or to avoid labor, sins against God and the Church who weeps over and condemns such abuses. ~Instruction Concerning the Procession of Rogation Days, Rev. Fr. Leonard Goffine’s The Church’s Year

Rogation Day Mass

Favorably receive our prayers, O Lord, we beseech Thee; may we in our distress be consoled by Thy gifts and grow in love accordingly. Through our Lord . . .

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Resources:

  • Litany of Saints Download ~ Sanctus Simplicitus
  • Instruction Concerning the Procession of Rogation Days ~ Rev. Fr. Leonard Goffine’s The Church’s Year
  • Rogation Days – Extraordinary Form (Tridentine) ~ St. John Cantius Parish
  • The Greater and Lesser Rogation Days ~ St. John Cantius Parish
  • The Liturgical Year – Paschal Time Vol. III ~ By: Dom Gueranger Imprimatur 1927 via Sanctus Simplicitus
  • Rogation Day – 2012 ~ JOYfilledfamily
  • Rogation Day – 2011 ~ JOYfilledfamily
  • Rogation Day – 2010 ~ JOYfilledfamily

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*Processions are a figure of our pilgrimage on earth; we are strangers and wanderers here below, our journey reaches from this valley of tears to the heavenly Sion, the procession therefore returns into the house of God; our journey leads over the thorny ways of life, the procession therefore takes place in the open air, where the pilgrim is exposed to all kinds of weather; they are a powerful incentive to fervor in prayer for the faithful; when hundreds, even thousands of faithful praise God aloud, or cry to Him for help and mercy, must not even the coldest heart be roused to vivid, fervent devotion, since Christ has promised to be present even where two or three are assembled in His name? Processions are an open acknowledgment that praise, thanks and adoration are due to God alone, while they are a public profession of our faith in Christ, the Crucified; they are a solemn thanksgiving for being permitted to profess Christ, our Lord, before the whole world, as also for all the graces obtained through Him; they are a public testimonial of our faith in the one, holy, Catholic Church, whose members are united by the same bond of faith, and who form under their head, Christ, one family in God. Finally, they are a sign of the triumph of Christian faith over the darkness of heathenism. If processions are solemnized with such intentions, with order and dignity, with fervent devotion, in the light of faith, they are indeed a pleasing sight for angels and men. ~Instruction Concerning the Procession of Rogation Days, Rev. Fr. Leonard Goffine’s The Church’s Year

Rogation Day

May 15, 2012 by Lena {JOYfilledfamily} Filed Under: 05 May, Rogation Day

Rogation Day P5140023

Commemoration of the MASS OF ROGATION 

The death and resurrection of Jesus have opened heaven and won the grace to avoid sin and to gain eternal happiness. But many of the consequences of sin still remain; and every person has his guilt to confess and atone for. Besides, there are the countless needs of soul and body that put all men on their knees before God. Earthquakes and other calamities afflicted Europe in the fifth century and St. Mamertus, instituted a penitential procession with public supplications in his Diocese. Hence, the special days of petition, called Rogation Days, marked by a special Mass, the Litany of the Saints, and, where possible, a procession during which the Litany is sung. It is well to join penance and fasting to all prayer. In 816 A.D., Pope Leo III introduced this Mass in Rome, and soon after it became a general observance throughout the Church.

Rogation Day P5140026
Grant, we beseech Thee, O almighty God, that we, who in our affliction put our trust in Thy mercy, may ever be defended by the protection against all adversity. Through our Lord . . .

Rogation Day P5140018

May these oblations, O Lord, we beseech Thee, loosen the bonds of our wickedness, and obtain for us the gifts of Thy mercy. Through our Lord . . .

Rogation Day P5140035

Favorably receive our prayers, O Lord, we beseech Thee; may we in our distress be consoled by Thy gifts and grow in love accordingly. Through our Lord . . . 

Rogation Day Collage

We beg Thee, God to bless the fields with Thy fatherly hand, to give and preserve the fruits of the earth, and as Thou fill the animals with blessings, and give them food at the proper time, so may Thee give to us also our necessary food.

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Resources:

  • Litany of Saints Download ~ Sanctus Simplicitus
  • Instruction Concerning the Procession of Rogation Days ~ Rev. Fr. Leonard Goffine’s The Church’s Year
  • Rogation Days – Extraordinary Form (Tridentine) ~ St. John Cantius Parish
  • The Greater and Lesser Rogation Days ~ St. John Cantius Parish
  • The Liturgical Year – Paschal Time Vol. III ~ By: Dom Gueranger Imprimatur 1927 via Sanctus Simplicitus
  • Rogation Day – 2011 ~ JOYfilledfamily
  • Rogation Day – 2010 ~ JOYfilledfamily

Marian Procession ‘12

May 7, 2012 by Lena {JOYfilledfamily} Filed Under: 05 May, Marian, Pilgrimage, Procession

As are all flowers, the month of May is dedicated to the Mary, whom we celebrate as Queen of Heaven on the last day of this month. Early in May, a statue of the Virgin at church is crowned with a wreath of roses, and the same are laid at her feet. Little girls and boys dress up in their best, often in blue; one child carries the crown on a cushion to the statue and another child is chosen to crown the statue.  ~ Fisheaters

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May 5, 2012 was the Fourth Annual Marian Procession – a 3-mile pilgrimage through the city in honor of Our Blessed Mother, an opportunity to give public witness to our Lord, our Faith, and Our Lady.

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Eighteen Little Flowers led the procession.  Each girl wore a blue hat in honor of Mary and held a handmade fabric basket filled with flower petals.  They tossed the flower petals for Our Lady.

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Dad walked with the boys and Rose had to leave early to meet the Choristers in preparation for Mass.

The three mile procession led us to the Cathedral.  A Solemn High Mass was held.  It was followed by the May Crowning.  A Little Flower (who will be receiving First Communion on 5.12) was selected to crown Mary.

We had planned to attend Mass but my allergies were at an all-time high – I was miserable and could barely breathe and see.  Dad and I took the littles home and met up with Rose after the Solemn High Mass.

AVE MARIA, gratia plena, Dominus tecum. Benedicta tu in mulieribus, et benedictus fructus ventris tui, Iesus. Sancta Maria, Mater Dei, ora pro nobis peccatoribus, nunc, et in hora mortis nostrae. Amen.

Saint Mary Magdalen de Pazzi

December 30, 2011 by Lena {JOYfilledfamily} Filed Under: 05 May, 05 May Saints, Patron Saint, St. Mary Magdalen de Pazzi 1 Comment

A little drop of simple obedience is worth a million times more than a whole vase of the choicest contemplation. ~ St. Mary Magdalen de’ Pazzi

maria5bI’m renewed to call upon another saint to intercede on my behalf—St. Mary Magdalen de Pazzi.

St. Mary Magdalen of Pazzi chose me for the year.

On the occasion of the New Year 1935 Saint Maria Faustina made this entry in her spiritual Diary:
“Jesus likes to intervene in the smallest details of our life. And He often fulfills secret wishes of mine that I sometimes hide from Him, although I know that from Him nothing can be hidden. There is a custom among us of drawing by lot on New Year’s Day, special patrons for ourselves for the whole year…”

~ Saint Maria Faustina

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St Mary Magdalene de Pazzi

St. Mart Magdalen of Pazzi

Born in Florence in 1566, she had a religious upbringing and entered the monastery of the Carmelite nuns there. She led a hidden life of prayer and self-denial, praying particularly for the renewal of the Church and encouraging the sisters in holiness. Her life was marked by many extraordinary graces. she died in 1607.

Feast: May 25
Patronage: Against Bodily Ills; Against Sexual Temptation; Sick People

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Come! Consume in us whatever prevents us from being consumed in you.  ~from the writings of Saint Mary Magdalene de Pazzi

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Resources:pazzi

  • St. Mary Magdalen of Pazzi General Info – SPQN
  • St. Mary Magdelen de Pazzi – Bob & Penny Lord
  • St. Mary Magdalen de Pazzi – Carmelite
  • St. Mary Magdalen de Pazzi Bio – EWTN
  • St. Mary Magdelen de Pazzi Bio – EWTN
  • Video Homily on St. Mary Magdalen de Pazzi
  • Come Holy Spirit – Audio from the writings On Revelation and On Trials by Saint Mary Magdalen de Pazzi, virgin (1566-1607)
  • St. Mary Magdalen de Pazzi Holy Card – Holy Card Heaven
  • St. Mary Magdelen de Pazzi Bio – Catholic Online
  • St. Mary Magdelen de Pazzi Gallery – Carmelites
  • Letter of His Holiness Benedict XVI – WF-F
  • Coloring Page of St. Mary Magdelen de Pazzi – Te Duem

 

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Saint Mary Magdalene de Pazzi, pray that we will make a commitment to seek the presence of God in prayer the way you did. Guide us to see the graces God gives us as gifts not rewards and to respond with gratitude and humility, not pride and selfishness. Amen

“Mother of Charity,” and “the Charity of the Monastery.” ~ Ora pro nobis

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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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