Total Pageviews

Friday, October 30, 2009

All Hallows Eve - Halloween



All Hallows Eve
Halloween
October 31


"Whatever is true, whatever is noble,
whatever is right, whatever is pure,
whatever is lovely, whatever is admirable
if anything is excellent or praiseworthy
think about such things
".
Philippians 4:8
It is time for Halloween once again. Each year I dread this 24 hour period, overwhelmed with worry about the well-being of family and friends celebrating an overgrown, big business, secular holiday that comes close to rivaling Christmas for the level of decoration and preparation. For those who don’t value devotion to the saints, All Hallows Eve has become “hollow” instead of “hallow.” This year I plan to take back Halloween to its original Christian Catholic roots.

Frankly, I love this time of year, crisp air, cool fog, trees turning color, days growing shorter, rain just around the corner. I just think things have gotten a bit out of control when Halloween is hyped by huge street parties, where revelers dress to, quite plainly, be seen. And drink, quite literally, a bit more than does a body good. This at times could lead one to do things they might later regret, if remember at all. A nightmare in more than just costumes, as police and paramedics put their own life on the line “baby sitting” celebrants, ready to rescue or control at a moments notice. Not to mention possible vandalism to personal property when drugs or alcohol prods one to be a bit more uninhibited than usual.


After 26 years, Halloween in the Castro was shut down in 2006, following injuries to seven people who were shot and multiple people who were stabbed in a crowd of 200,000 during that year’s celebration. But instead of worrying about needless violence and decadence, I say it’s time to take Halloween back!!! Who is coming with me? Don’t all jump up at once!!!

According to Webster’s dictionary Halloween is short for All Hallow Even. Hallow means holy or set apart and hallows means holy ones. Hallow, as a noun, is an Old English word for saint. As a verb, it means to make something holy or to honor it as holy. Eve means before festivities. Putting this all together Halloween really stands for the evening before a holy day set apart for holy ones, or saints. Webster’s also lists All Hallow Even to mean All Saint’s Eve. And actually this is exactly what Halloween is, the evening or vigil before All Saints Day.

What is All Saints Day? As far back as the 4th century Christians solemnized or honored the anniversary of a martyr’s death. A martyr, meaning witness, was a person who voluntarily suffered death as a penalty of witnessing to and refusing to renounce their religion. Early Christians were frequently martyred, some in groups, and as the persecution of Christians continued their number grew to be so great that a separate day could not be assigned to each.

We read of a common feast being asked for in the sermon of St. Ephrem the Syrian in 373, and in 397 by Saint Basil of Caesarea, and in the 74th homily of Saint John Chrysostom in the year 407. In 411 the holiday was placed on the Friday after Easter. In approximately 609, Pope Boniface IV placed the anniversary for the Blessed Virgin and all martyrs on May 13. Finally Pope Gregory III in the 8th century consecrated a chapel in the Basilica of St. Peter to all the saints and fixed the anniversary for November 1. In the 9th century, Pope Gregory IV extended the celebration on November 1 to the entire Church. (From All Saints’ Day, Catholic Encyclopedia)

All Saints Day, November 1, or the vigil of All Saints Day, popularly called Halloween, on October 31 has thus been faithfully celebrated as a Catholic solemnity for over 1100 years. But as with many Catholic Christian holidays, the secular world has attached its own traditions, such as costumes, trick-or-treating, parties, as well as other customs, not all of which are intrinsically wrong, but could become problematic when the activity becomes unwholesome or evil and actually leads a person on a path of temptation and destruction.

Dressing up as a saint brings Halloween back to its roots. And if you think that dressing as a saint won’t be ghoulish enough, think again. Picture if you will a procession of saints. All saints do not have to be martyrs, but clearly these make for the most gruesome costumes. Leading the way will be Saint Thomas More walking proudly with his head tucked under his arm. Beheaded in 1535 for refusing to render allegiance to King Henry VIII as the head of the Church of England, Saint Thomas More told the crowd of spectators as he awaited his execution, that he was dying as “the King’s good servant – but God’s first.”

Not macabre enough? Next in line rolls Saint Lawrence roasting over a slow burning fire. Saint Lawrence made sport of his pain by saying, " I am done enough, eat, if you will." Saint Lawrence’s crime in 258 was to be a deacon in the Catholic Church. The Roman Emperor Valerian did not have a liking for Catholic bishops, priests, and deacons and ordered them all put to death.

I certainly don’t want to be called sexist, so next in line proceeds Saint Joan of Arc. She arrives, not on the strong steed she road into battle against the English, but walking tall, dragging her pile of stakes as they burn brilliantly against her back and engulf her feet.

Born a peasant, Saint Joan of Arc led a small army against the English enemies of France at age 17. Her crime, the voice of God she heard in her head which correctly and carefully allowed France to be victorious in battle. She was burned at the stake at 19 years of age for heresy.

If ghoulish saints do not thrill you, there are hundreds of fascinating saints to choose from. Celebrated in a positive manner, Halloween can be a reminder of human mortality and the need for everyone to prepare to face God. Everything in this life either brings you closer to God and salvation, or a step away from Him and on a path to evil and ruin. Choices in life are clearly not always easy to make. But they do have to be made.

Now might be a good time to renew your baptismal promises and recite the Prayer of Saint Michael the Archangel.

Baptismal Promises
Do you reject sin so as to live in the freedom of God’s children? I do.
Do you reject the glamour of evil and refuse to be mastered by sin? I do.
Do reject Satan, father of sin and prince of darkness? I do.

Prayer to Saint Michael
May Saint Michael the Archangel,
defend us in the day of battle.
Be our protection against the wickedness
and snares of the devil;
May God rebuke him,
we humbly pray;
And do thou,
O Prince of the Heavenly host,
By the divine power of God,
thrust into hell Satan and all evil spirits
Who wander through the world
Seeking the ruin of souls. Amen
Happy All Hallows Eve, and I've just got to say it or I have to turn in my "Mother Card", please, be careful out there.

Illustrations
Litany of Saints
Beheading of Saint Thomas More
Saint Laurence Martyred
Saint Joan of Arc at the Stake

Tuesday, October 27, 2009

The Sorrowful Mysteries Scriptural Rosary



The Sorrowful Mysteries
Scriptural Rosary

The Sorrowful Mysteries, are commonly said on Tuesday and Friday. The following are excerpts from The Miracle of Love Rosary by Kitty Cleveland. This CD is available from Lynn's Timeless Treasures eBay Store


“As they nailed my hands and feet and pierced my side, I loved you. As I hung in agony and slowly died, I knew you. I died to set you free, to give you life eternally, as they nailed my hands and feet I loved you.”

The First Sorrowful mystery the Agony in the Garden


“After celebrating the liberating story of Passover Jesus now faces his agonizing and violent death. Freedom for his ancestors had been won by the saving gift of the lambs blood and the parting of the Red Sea. Now it shall be won for all by the bloody baptism of the cross. The Garden of Eden was the scene of disobedience to God’s plan, the Garden of Gethsemane brings the same dreadful blissful choice will it be the Father’s way or my way. Jesus shows us how to be obedient unto death, by trusting our very lives to the Father, may we pray with all of our being in the midst of all of our agonies, Father you will not mine be done.”



Read the following passages from Scripture before praying this decade: Mark 14:32-46; and Luke 22:41-44

The Second Sorrowful Mystery, the Scourging at the Pillar

“The ordeal begins with a brutal whipping, a barrage of stinging cutting blows that tear through His flesh, the physical pain is matched with the pain of rejection and jeering ridicule. But instead of the expected curses or cries for mercy, our Savior responds with majestic silence. His answer to evil, the only acceptable answer to evil is unlimited love. Let us never meet violence and hatred with more of the same, but rather patient endurance and forgiveness. And as we model Our Lords submissive love during our own ordeals in life may the power of God be perfected in us.”



Read the following passages from Scripture before praying this decade: Mark 15:1-5; 11-15 and Mark 23:22-24


The Third Sorrowful Mystery, the Crowning with Thorns

“The mocking intensifies as they crown our King with thorns . Jesus does not fit their expectations as a savior so they will kill this blasphemer. What has lead to the point of madness? As Jesus puts it, seeing things as human see, not as God sees. In our humanness we think that humiliation and suffering have no value and should be avoided at all costs, but Our Lord shows us the truth through His patient endurance of these thorns in His flesh. We learn that our suffering is redemptive when we unite it in love with His suffering. We pray for the grace to both accept and overcome the limitations of our human thinking as we seek to know and trust the true wisdom of God.”

Read Mark 15:16-19; and John 19:4-16



The Fourth Sorrowful Mystery, the Carrying of the Cross

“Unless you take up your cross daily and follow me, you cannot be my disciple. We so easily say we believe in Jesus, but when the cross meets us in our daily lives we are often like the original disciples, scandalized by the truth and run for the hills. Human nature resists the cross because it brings death, death to the false self, and to security and control according to our measure. Sacrifice seems like such a harsh invitation. But the word sacrifice means, to make holy. The truth is that our heaviest crosses bring us the closest to Our Lord as we become like Him. Let us accept with joy the peace, whatever our state in life demands of us, duty, routine, self-denial, this is the fruitful cross of our daily walk with Jesus.”

Read Matthew 27:31-40; and Luke 23:27-32

The Fifth Sorrowful Mystery, the Crucifixion and Death




“Jesus was put between two others convicted of capital crimes. One is forever remembered for asking for and receiving the promise of eternal life. He didn’t desire Heaven and neither does anyone else. God’s judgment is different from ours, not all who say, Lord Lord will enter the kingdom but only those who do the will of the Father. As life is not on our terms, neither is death. Let us pray for reverence for all life, including those who have not themselves reverenced it. Father forgive them, they know not what they do.


Read Luke 23:34; 42-46; John 19:26-34; 41-42 and Matthew 27:46

Sunday, October 25, 2009

The Glorious Mysteries of the Holy Rosary




The Glorious Mysteries
Scriptural Rosary


The Glorious Mysteries, commonly said on Sundays and Wednesdays, call to mind Christ’s sacrifice for the redemption of the world, and our sharing in the fruits of this sacrifice.

The First Glorious Mystery, The Resurrection of Jesus is a time to contemplate the glorious triumph when on the third day after His death, He arose from the tomb and for forty days appeared to His Blessed Mother and the disciples. Read the following passages from Scripture before praying this decade: Matthew 28:1-7; John 20:20-25 and 27-29.

The Second Glorious Mystery, the Ascension of Our Lord, calls to mind the desire for the virtue of hope as we ask our Lord for the grace to persevere in faith throughout our life with a firm hope and deep longing for heaven. Read the following passages from Scripture before praying this decade: Luke 24:50-53; Matthew 28:18-20; Mark 16:16; Mark 16:20 and Acts 1:10-11.

The Third Glorious Mystery, the Descent of the Holy Spirit reminds us to ask the Holy Spirit to fill us with His gifts, that we may produce the fruits of the Spirit, love, joy, peace, patience kindness, generosity, faithfulness, gentleness and self-control. Read the following passages from Scripture before praying this decade: John 14:26; Acts 1: 5-8; Acts 2: 1-6; and 38-41.

The Fourth Glorious Mystery, the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary into Heaven, reminds us to contemplate and desire a holy death. By the power of God, Mary was assumed into heaven and reunited with her Divine Son, help us to have this gift of a holy death. Read the following passages from Scripture before praying this decade: Genesis 3:15; Song of Songs 2:10-11; Judith 13:18-19; Judith 15:9; Psalm 132-8; Revelation 11:19; and Luke 1:46-48.

The Fifth Glorious Mystery, the Coronation of the Blessed Virgin Mary as Queen of Heaven is a time to contemplate a deeper love for Our Blessed Mother and desire to always be willing to say yes to God as Mary did throughout her life. Read the following passages from Scripture before praying this decade: Psalm 45:10-15; Song of Songs 6:10; Luke 1:46-49; 2 Timothy 2:11-12; Revelation 12:1, 5 and Revelation 22:17.