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Kingship of Our Lord Jesus Christ

October 30, 2022 by Lena {JOYfilledfamily} Filed Under: 10 October Saints, Christ the King, Pilgrimage Leave a Comment

“The true and faithful vassal of Christ the King, the true warrior of Christ the King, must constantly maintain a full notion of what is happening around him, seeing and lamenting all that denies the royalty of Our Lord. It is of no avail just to have generic abstract ideas if they are not applied to the practical situations of our lives.

A Catholic who does not assume an attitude of sorrow and bitterness when he sees the royalty of Our Lord being denied today is not a true soldier of Christ the King.

We should be known for constantly taking this attitude of bitter sorrow to see the rights of Our Lord denied around us. It should not be a sterile, academic thing, but a manly indignation that prepares a counter-attack to put things in their correct order as soon as possible.

Adopting this condition of persons in exile, we should pray to Our Lord, asking Him to allow us to restore His Kingdom on earth in the most authentic and elevated way possible, that is to say, through the royalty of Our Lady. It is the Kingdom of Our Lady that appears on the horizon as predicted at Fatima.” #PinoCorrêadeOliveira

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Christus vincit,
Christus regnat,
Christus imperat.

Christ conquers,
Christ reigns,
Christ commands.

📸Our recent family pilgrimage with a traditional priest and other likeminded families — banding together as pilgrims for Christ. Viva Cristo Rey!

All Saints Day 2021 — Bl. Charles the Good

Christus Vincit! + Christus Regnat! + Christus Imperat! +

“ Therefore by Our Apostolic Authority We institute the Feast of the Kingship of Our Lord Jesus Christ to be observed yearly throughout the whole world on the last Sun. of the month of Oct. — the Sunday, that is, which immediately precedes the Feast of All Saints. We further ordain that the dedication of mankind to the Sacred Heart of Jesus, which Our predecessor of saintly memory, Pope Pius X, commanded to be renewed yearly, be made annually on that day.” — Pope Pius XI, Encyclical Quas primas §28, 11 December 1925

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Act of Consecration of the Human Race to the Sacred Heart of Jesus

Most Sweet Jesus, Redeemer of the human race, look down upon us humbly prostrate before Thine altar. We are Thine, and Thine we wish to be; but to be more surely united to Thee, behold each one of us freely consecrates ourselves today to Thy Most Sacred Heart.

Many indeed have never known Thee; Many too, despising Thy precepts, have rejected Thee. Have mercy on them all, most merciful Jesus, and draw them to Thy Sacred Heart. Be Thou King, O Lord, not only of the faithful children, who have never forsaken Thee, but also of the prodigal children, who have abandoned Thee; Grant that they may quickly return to their Father’s house lest they die of wretchedness and hunger.

Be Thou King of those who are deceived by erroneous opinions, or whom discord keeps aloof, and call them back to the harbour of truth and unity of faith, so that there may be but one flock and one Shepherd.

Be Thou King of all those who are still involved in the darkness of idolatry or of Islamism, and refuse not to draw them into the light and kingdom of God. Turn Thine eyes of mercy towards the children of the race, once Thy chosen people: of old they called down upon themselves the Blood of the Saviour; may it now descend upon them a laver of redemption and of life.

Grant, O Lord, to Thy Church assurance of freedom and immunity from harm; give peace and order to all nations, and make the earth resound from pole to pole with one cry; praise to the Divine Heart that wrought our salvation; To it be glory and honour forever.

Holy Mass while on a family pilgrimage in October 2020

Christ the King (feast celebrated on the last Sunday of October) – All Kings Shall Adore Him, All Nations Shall Serve Him

“If the nature of Our Lord Jesus Christ the King is such, if Jesus has conquered our hearts and our souls by His death on the cross, we must ask ourselves this: is Our Lord Jesus Christ truly our King? Practically, daily, in all of our actions, in all of our thoughts?

Let us today entreat the most Blessed Virgin Mary and St. Joseph, not only for ourselves, but also for our families, for all those who surround us. That they may come to the light of Our Lord Jesus Christ who know Him but little, who do not obey him, who distance themselves from Him. Let us have pity on all those souls who do not know the King of love and of glory – in Whom we have the happiness to believe, Whom we have the happiness to love.” #domgasparlefebvre

Sts. Simon & Jude

October 28, 2022 by Lena {JOYfilledfamily} Filed Under: 10 October Saints, Carmel Pilgrimage, Fr. Francis Xavier Weninger, Pilgrimage, Sts. Simon & Jude Leave a Comment

We make our annual pilgrimage for various intentions — the primary one is for us is to restore Christendom, starting with making Christ the King of our family. We seek to live radically and pray that our children will understand & embrace their duty. The lives of the saints are pertinent to our journey.

The below practical consideration from #frWeninger for the saints of today (10.28) is one that we sit with often.

My God, preserve me from too much loving my ease, for thereby I should become the enemy of my soul and of my body as well.

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Saint Simon is brought to the idol of the Sun, and Saint Jude to that of the Moon, with the command to sacrifice; and, when both declare that they sacrifice only to the true God, both suffer martyrdom.

Can you also say, with truth, that you sacrifice only to the true God?

How many hours, how much labor, trouble and care have you sacrificed to vanity and pride, to the world, the flesh and the devil?

Do you consider that less punishable than to offer a few grains of incense to a lifeless image?

Oh! learn to despise this way of conducting yourself, and endeavor to live in such a manner that you may truthfully say that you offer sacrifice to the true God alone.

Offer to the Almighty, early in the morning, all your thoughts, words and actions, all your cares and labors, and all that you may have to suffer during the day.

During the day, offer to Him the incense which is most agreeable to Him – that of prayer and good works. Offer Him your self-abnegation, the control of your evil inclinations, especially anger, impatience, and curiosity.

Offer your self-conquest, by forgiving those who wrong you; by abstaining from unchaste and slanderous conversation; from intemperance in eating and drinking – in one word, from everything displeasing to Him.

Offer to Him, especially at night, a repentant and contrite heart, a heart ready to serve Him zealously and constantly.

“A sacrifice to God is an afflicted spirit; a contrite and humble heart, O God, you wilt not despise.” (Psalms 1) “It is a wholesome sacrifice to take heed to the commandments, and to depart from all iniquity.” (Eccl. 35)

4 of us 8 who went on our second pilgrimage this year #carmelpilgrimage

Zeal is an ardent love which makes a man fearless in defence of God’s honor, and earnest at all costs to make known the truth. If we would be children of the Saints, we must be zealous for the faith.

Pictorial Lives of the Saints — Sts. Simon & Jude

Traditional Catholics

October 25, 2022 by Lena {JOYfilledfamily} Filed Under: 10 October, Christ the King, Pilgrimage, Pilgrimage to Our Lady of Bethlehem Leave a Comment

What traditional Catholics will do.
What every person in authority should remember.
What good fathers must do.
What we fight for….

It is more than “just” the Mass of the ages — it is for our traditions, the Faith of our fathers. 🙏🏼


This video contains clips from our second pilgrimage of this year (10.22) and part of a sermon from our Chaplain.

Sts. Primus and Felicianus

June 9, 2021 by Lena {JOYfilledfamily} Filed Under: 06 June Saints, Pictorial Lives of the Saints, Pilgrimage, Pilgrimage to Our Lady of Bethlehem, The Church’s Year Leave a Comment

There’s so much that we’re unpacking from our recent pilgrimage and much more that we will quietly carry, waiting for the good Lord to reveal in His time.

One thing is certain, we desire to joyfully take up our cross, to be transformed, refined, and stripped as He wills for us.

11th Our Lady of Bethlehem Pilgrimage 2021 – two brothers walk together

We further meditate on the lives of today’s saints and the following reflection from the #pictoriallivesofthesaints.

“A soul which truly loves God regards all the things of this world as nothing. The loss of goods, the disgrace of the world, torments, sickness, and other afflictions are bitter to the senses, but appear light to him that loves. If we cannot bear our trials with patience and silence, it is because we love God only in words.

“One who is slothful and lukewarm complains of every thing, and calls the lightest precepts hard,” says Thomas a Kempis.”

Sts. Primus and Felicianus, orate pro nobis.

Pictorial Lives of the Saints – Saint Primus and Felicianus, Martyrs

These two martyrs were brothers, and lived in Rome, toward the latter part of the third century, for many years, mutually encouraging each other in the practice of all good works. They seemed to possess nothing but for the poor, and often spent both nights and days with the confessors in their dungeons, or at the places of their torments and execution. Some they encouraged to perseverance, others, who had fallen, they raised again, and they made themselves the servants of all in Christ, that all might attain to salvation through Him. Though their zeal was most remarkable, they had escaped the dangers of many bloody persecutions, and were grown old in the heroic exercises of virtue, when it pleased God to crown their labors with a glorious martyrdom. The pagans raised so great an outcry against them that they were both apprehended and put in chains. They were inhumanly scourged, and then sent to a town twelve miles from Rome, to be farther chastised, as avowed enemies to the gods. There they were cruelly tortured, first both together, afterward separately. But the grace of God strengthened them, and they were at length both beheaded on the 9th of June.

Reflection – A soul which truly loves God regards all the things of this world as nothing. The loss of goods, the disgrace of the world, torments, sickness, and other afflictions are bitter to the senses, but appear light to him that loves. If we cannot bear our trials with patience and silence, it is because we love God only in words. “One who is slothful and lukewarm complains of every thing, and calls the lightest precepts hard,” says Thomas a Kempis.

JUNE 9: STS. PRIMUS AND FELICIAN, MARTYRS

From Dom Guéranger’s The Liturgical Year.

ROSES and lilies are exquisitely alternated in the wreath woven by centuries for the bride of the Son of God. Though the world be heedless of the fact, it is none the less true that everything here below has but one object, namely to bedeck the Church with the attractive charms of heaven, to adjust her jewelled robes formed of the virtues of her saints, that she may be fitted to take her seat beside her divine Spouse, in the highest heavens, for all eternity.[1] The sacred cycle, in its yearly course, presents an image of those ceaseless labours whereby the Holy Ghost continues to form, up to the day of the eternal nuptials, that varied robe of holy Church, by diversifying the merits of God’s servants, her members here below. To-day we have two martyrs becrimsoned with their own blood, setting off the dazzling whiteness of Norbert’s works, or of William’s innocence; and to-morrow we may contemplate with delighted gaze the softer light beamed upon our earth by Margaret, Scotland’s pearl.

Primus and Felician, wealthy Romans, had already attained maturity of age, when our Lord made his voice heard inviting them to forsake their vain idols. Brothers according to the flesh, they now became more really such by fidelity to the same call of grace. Together they proved themselves intrepid helpers of the confessors of Christ amidst the atrocious persecution which raged against the Church during the latter half of the third century. In the same combat were they to fall side by side, exchanging this frail life here below for that into which, at one birth, they were to enter for ever in heaven. They furthermore were honoured by having their precious relics placed in the celebrated sanctuary consecrated to St Stephen, the Proto-Martyr, on Monte Cœlio; and they form its richest treasure.

The holy liturgy relates their triumph in these few lines:

Primus et Felicianus fratres, in persecutione Diocletiani et Maximiani accusati christianæ religionis, in vincula conjiciuntur: quibus soluti, inde eripiuntur ab angelo. Mox ad prætorem adducti, cum christianam fidem acerrime tuerentur, alter ab altero distracti sunt; ac primum varie tentata est constantia Feliciani. Sed cum suasores impietatis se posse quidquam verbis proficere despcrarent, affixis stipiti manibus ejus et pedibus, ipsum sine cibo et potu inde triduum pendentem reliquerunt. Postridie ejus diei prætor vocatum ad se Primum sic affatur: Vides quanto sit prudentior quam tu frater tuus, qui, obsecutus imperatoribus, apud ipsos est honoratus. Quem si tu quoque imitari volueris, particeps eris ejus honoris et gratiæ.

Cui Primus: Quid factum sit fratri meo cognovi ex angelo. Utinam quemadmodum sum cum eo voluntate conjunctissimus, sic ab eodem ne martyrio disjungar.

Quo dicto, excanduit prætor, et ad cæteros cruciatus quibus Primum affecit, præsente jam Feliciano, liquatum igne plumbum in os ejus jussit infundi. Mox utrumque perduci imperat in theatrum, in eosque immitti duos leones: qui prostrati ad eorum genua, capite et cauda ipsis blandiebantur. Ad id spectaculum cum amplius duodecim millia hominum convenissent, quingenti cum suis familiis christianam religionem susceperunt. Quibus rebus permotus prætor, eos securi percuti jussit.

Primus and Felician were brothers, and, being accused of professing the Christian religion during the persecution of Diocletian and Maximian, they were thrown into irons, which an angel broke, and they were delivered. But, being soon led again before the pr*tor, and as they most earnestly clung to the Christian faith, they were separated one from the other. The steadfastness of Felician was the first to be put to the test in divers ways. As they who strove to persuade him to impiety found it hopeless to gain aught from him by words, he was fastened hand and foot to a stake, and there left to hang three days without either food or drink. The day after that, the prætor having called Primus before him, thus addressed him: ‘Seest thou how much wiser is thy brother than thou art? He hath obeyed the emperors, and they have made him honourable. Thou hast only to follow his example to be made partaker of his honours and favours.’

Primus replied: ‘What hath befallen my brother I know, for an angel hath told me. Would to God, that seeing I have the same will that he hath, I were not divided from him in the same martyrdom.’

These words raised the wrath of the prætor, and in addition to the torments which he had already inflicted on Primus, he ordered boiling lead to be poured into his mouth, and this in presence of Felician. After that, he had them both dragged into the amphitheatre, and two lions let loose upon them, in presence of about twelve thousand people, who were gathered together to see the show. The lions only fawned upon the knees of the saints, making friends with them, caressingly moving their heads and tails. This spectacle converted five hundred persons of the assembled crowd, together with their households, to the Christian religion. The prætor, moved to anger by what had passed, caused Primus and Felician to be beheaded with an axe.


O ye brave veterans of the Lord’s battles, teach us what energy we must bring to the service of God, whatsoever be our age. Less favoured than we are, ye came late in life to the knowledge of the Gospel and of those inestimable treasures promised to the Christian. But in holy Baptism your youth was renewed as that of the eagle,[2] and for thirty years the Holy Ghost continued to produce rich fruits in you. When, in extreme old age, the hour of final victory at last sounded, your courage was equal to that of the most vigorous warriors. You were nerved up to such heroism and sustained therein, through prayer constantly kept alive within you by the words of the psalms, as your Acts attest. Revive then amongst us faith in the word of God; his promises will make us despise, as ye did, this present life. Lead our piety back to those true sources which strengthen the soul: the knowledge and daily use of those sacred formulas which bind our earth unfailingly to heaven, whence they were brought down to us.

Family Pilgrimage ~ Day 1

June 11, 2016 by Lena {JOYfilledfamily} Filed Under: Our Lady of Bethlehem, Pilgrimage, Pilgrimage to OLOB 2016, Pilgrimage to Our Lady of Bethlehem Leave a Comment

This is the recap of the start of our journey — Our Lady of Bethlehem Pilgrimage 2016.

OLOB why we walk

 Thursday 19th of May 2016

The entire family ventured out for our Annual Our Lady of Bethlehem Pilgrimage.

We went up a day early to ease the strain on the littles.  All would have been good had there not been winds of 45mph.  You know that means trouble for a large van.  The winds and hills led to some queasy stomachs.  One stop and a custom essential oil blend  is all that was needed.IMG_9451

The journey continued and we arrived at our first destination around 10:30 pm.  We met up with two other families at a camp site close to the Mission and slept in our cars.  It was the start of reparation.  I failed to get a decent peek into our “camper,” just imagine something similar to this…

Friday 20th of May 2016

The Holy Spirit , Spirit of Holiness under the patronage of St Catherine of Sienna

The crew had an early rise, 5:30 am to be exact.  I don’t recall ever falling asleep.  We prepared for 7:30 am  Mass and the first leg of our walk.

 

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Our fellow pilgrims met at Mission San Juan Bautista.

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Our personal intentions and all intentions shared with us were collected by Fr. A, carried by him on the pilgrimage, and placed on the Altar for every Mass, Benediction, and Compline.

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It is a great blessing to have a Chaplain accompany us for the entire pilgrimage, one that we have not always had.

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My girls were committed to walking the entire 45 miles.

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I have good reason to believe that this is the last pilgrimage we will take as a complete family of 9 living under the same roof and I wanted to cherish each moment of our journey to the fullest – a new season awaits.

Dad could not walk since he is still recovering from his surgery for a ruptured achilies tendon but that didn’t stop him from serving.  He took on the primary support role for our family, taking care of the littles, preparing meals, transporting, organizing our cargo, and photography.

The journey on foot followed the blessing of pilgrims by Fr. A.


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We were off around 8:15 am, singing traditional hymns along the way.

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The tides are shifting with each year, the young children are growing and taking the lead on this journey that has become part of their upbringing.

 

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Rose and I had many opportunities to reflect on our relationship, journey, and life.

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The view at every turn was stellar.

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He was refreshed with the open spaces that spoke to his heart.

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We had an eager 5yo leader that needed to be reigned in a time or two — that’s why we put him in neon clothing when we venture out.

 

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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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