Thursday, August 30, 2007

A lot of laughter shared over a lemon meringue pie



By Jnet

For several years now, I've gone back and forth in my consideration for taking on a life of religious vocation.

G took me to visit with his sister in the Bay Area who is a numerary of Opus Dei and I was charmed by the sisterhood life that L is living. She is an optometrist and she lives with a diverse group of women that are the best of friends. There was a lot of laughter shared over a lemon meringue pie. Opus dei's philosophy of life is that the daily life is a "work of God".... therefore, being a great teacher, optometrist, college student, or homemaker can be lived to the gratitude and celebration of God.

L lives in a beautiful community and all the women; young and older are absolutely lovely people... inside and out. I asked my questions regarding the image that the book "The Da Vinci Code" creates about their organization and found it absolutely funny that a work of fiction has managed to create such distortion.

Is Opus Dei for me?

Opus Dei certainly has a certain appeal that contrasts with the ascetic life of a nun. Knowing myself, I know I am not a perfect fit for a cloistered Christian life. Not that I think that having a faith and being committed to its corresponding community is wrong or insular. It is due to their special commitment that the health of their spiritual community grows and thrives. They are a system of people that are essential but no better than other systems. Does a body think the nervous system better than the immune system?

L and her friends have found and created their home.

My place in this spiritual world is still under construction. I don't have a "name" for that home or a certain community that I belong to exclusively...

But I certainly consider life as an opportunity to celebrate and live as an "opus dei" a work of God. My champagne days continue toasting to the beauty and diversity of life.

JNET

Tuesday, August 28, 2007

She needs a pair of lungs NOW!

Three favors granted by St. Josemaria

I conquered the temptation with the help of St Josemaría
I am an Acolyte in our little but strong parish. Our Sacristan Major decided to give us formal training and teaching all about being an Acolyte. So, he called a nun who was the one who gave us the seminar. After the seminar, before leaving us, the nun gave us a Prayer Card of St Josemaria. I kept it, thinking that it was nothing important... After several days, there was a great temptation that blocked my way from doing some noble acts. I remembered the Prayer Card, I got it and I prayed. What happened was I conquered the temptation with the help of St. Josemaria.
Glenn, Philippines
July 19, 2007

A lung transplant
I have lived in Stockholm for two years and I work as a physiotherapist with patients who suffer from cystic fibrosis, a disease that affects the lungs. One of my patients had been waiting over a year for a lung transplant. A fortnight ago this patient was hospitalized in a very bad state. On Sunday, when I went to give her treatment, I could see that she was so seriously ill – almost dying – that I felt desperate, and as I left the hospital I said, “St Josemaría, I can’t remember your prayer, but this girl needs a pair of lungs NOW!” On Monday I got a surprise: I’d hardly set foot in the hospital when I heard that my patient had been transferred to Lund in the south of Sweden very early that day, because “by chance” new lungs had been found for her! Everything is now going well.
M. C. R., Sweden
July 5, 2007

Music that brings people closer to God
I am 19 and an organist. On June 24, two days before St Josemaría’s feast-day, I gave a concert of sacred music. During the concert I had the prayer-card of St Josemaría next to my sheets of music. I prayed to him to help me offer those present music that would help them draw closer to God. The concert was a great success. Thank you, St Josemaría.
Jean-François, France
July 4, 2007

Taken from: http://www.josemariaescriva.info/index.php?id_cat=401&id_scat=284

Sunday, August 19, 2007

I feel good in this family

By Aurelio from Milan, Italy

Quote: Originally Posted by westcoast
Has anyone here "joined" Opus Dei? How is it? How did you know you should have joined? I'm just looking up stuff on it and find it interesting....


I am a supernumerary faithful of the Prelacy (I hope the English expression is accurate, I am Italian) for more than 20 years.

How is it? Your question is a bit vague, I can say that I know this is my way, chosen by God, to go to Him.

I like this "place", I realized in all these years it's a real family. I feel good in this family, because it's mine, I mean... anywhere God puts us, in time we find it's great, don't we?

I have personally experienced that this is a "spot" where freedom - in what is not Church's doctrine - is deep, and for my rather unconformist character this is priceless.

How did I know I should have joined? I frequented Opus Dei's formation means in my university years, after a few years I was deeply convinced it could be my way and... "they" didn't say me no.

All the best

Aurelio

From: http://forums.catholic.com/showthread.php?p=2578305#post2578305

Friday, August 10, 2007

St. Josemaria Escriva and His Contribution to the Church

By Bishop Robert W. Finn of Kansas City-St. Joseph

About a month ago, I celebrated a Mass at one of our parish churches marking the feast of a modern day saint, Josemaria Escriva, who is perhaps best known as the founder of a Catholic group called Opus Dei. I thought I would take this space today to talk about this Spanish diocesan priest who was canonized by Pope John Paul II on Oct. 6, 2002, and whose feast day is observed in the Church throughout the world on June 26.

Josemaria Escriva de Balaguer was born in Barbastro, Spain, on Jan. 9, 1902, and died in Rome on June 26, 1975. As a child he was sickly, and at one point he was near death. His health rallied when his parents took him to a Marian shrine in Spain. As a child he witnessed the deaths of his three sisters, the collapse of the family business and his father's early death, all of which seemed to only strengthen his reliance on God.

As a teen, Josemaria noticed one day the footprints left by a Carmelite priest walking barefoot in the snow, and felt God was calling him to a greater generosity. He was ordained a priest in March 1925 and often asked God, in prayer, to help him "see" His plan for him.

On Oct. 2, 1928, the feast of the Guardian Angels, he "saw" by a kind of divine inspiration a plan for holiness and evangelization in the world, a way of living that would help people be holy in the very concrete and everyday responsibilities of their life. Initially, he understood this as an association for lay men; later he realized it was also something that was to be extended to lay women.

He eventually also established the Priestly Society of the Holy Cross for diocesan priests, when he saw what poor spiritual formation they often had. While the priests remain completely attached to their local bishop and diocese, the Society provides them with support and sound spiritual direction.

Lay men and women constitute 95% (or more) of the membership of Opus Dei. Some of these are unmarried men or women who live in centers of "the Work." There are separate centers for men and women. They have daily jobs as engineers, business men or women, lawyers, doctors, etc., and have meals and prayer in common. They do some kind of apostolate or work that involves promoting a holy life in the midst of the world. They often might teach Catholic catechism and give spiritual direction.

Although he had great respect and love for consecrated men and women, St. Josemaria was insistent that what he "saw" was not a religious order. It was a vocation to find holiness in the world, by doing our daily work with great love.

He wanted to remind Christians that "sanctity is not something for the privileged few." Rather, "all paths of the earth can be divine."

Curiously this sense of the Universal Call to Holiness for every person is often associated with the teachings of the Second Vatican Council.

Father Josemaria promoted it in a concrete way nearly 40 years before the Council! Father Josemaria and his first associates had to live their faith somewhat "underground" during the Spanish Civil War (1936-1939), when many priests and Religious were killed for their faith.

Father Josemaria was a charismatic and fatherly personality who had great humility and a strong compassion for the sick. During the Council he was highly regarded and many bishops from all over the world visited him in Rome to ask his advice about the early documents and discussions of the Council, particularly about the role of the laity in the Church.

By the time of his death, Father Josemaria's Work had spread to 80 countries. The most recent center was established in Russia in the last months. To learn more about St. Josemaria Escriva, go to www.stjosemaria.org.

O God, through the mediation of Mary our Mother, you granted your priest Saint Josemaria countless graces, choosing him as a most faithful instrument to found Opus Dei, a way of sanctification in daily work and in the fulfillment of the Christian's ordinary duties. Grant that I, too, may learn to turn all the circumstances and events of my life into occasions of loving you and serving the Church, the Pope and all souls with joy and simplicity, lighting up the pathways of this earth with faith and love. Deign to grant me through the intercession of Saint Josemaria, the favor of . (make request).. Amen.

Taken from: Fergal O'Neill at In Manus Tuas

Archbishop Romero: Friend of Opus Dei

By Ratzinger Fan Club

via Wheat and Reeds, the suprising (and delightful) news that Archbishop Romero was a son of Opus Dei. This from a letter Archbishop Romero wrote to Paul VI, after St. Escriva's death:

"I had the good fortune of knowing Monsignor Escriva de Balaguer personally and of receiving from him support and fortitude to be faithful to the inalterable doctrine of Christ and to serve with apostolic zeal the Holy Roman Church and this land of Santiago de Maria, which Your Holiness has entrusted to me.

"I have known, for several years now, the work of Opus Dei here in El Salvador, and I can testify to the supernatural sense that animates it and to the fidelity to the ecclesiastical magisterium that characterizes the work.

"Personally, I owe deep gratitude to the priests involved with the work, to whom I have trusted with much satisfaction the spiritual direction of my life and that of other priests.

"People from all social classes find in Opus Dei a secure orientation for living as sons of God in the midst of their daily family and social obligations. And this is doubtless due to the life and doctrine of its founder.

"In this stormy world overrun by insecurity and doubt, the superb doctrinal fidelity that characterizes Opus Dei is a sign of special grace from God.Source: Romero & Escriva - Fr Ray Blake @ St Mary Magdalen (Brighton).

James R. Brockman, S.J., in "The Spiritual Journey of Oscar Romero", writes:

Romero remained an auxiliary bishop of San Salvador until October of 1974, when he was named bishop of Santiago de Maria, a rural diocese. He remained in Santiago until named archbishop of San Salvador in February of 1977, at the age of fifty-nine. During these five years, his retreat notes show him continuing to work on the problems of getting along with others and trying to organize his life better, as he had in earlier retreats. At least two of the retreats he made were preached by priests of the secular institute Opus Dei, and during these years and perhaps earlier his ordinary confessor and spiritual director was one or another priest of Opus Dei. While he was bishop of Santiago de Maria, he wrote to Pope Paul VI to appeal for the beatification of [Escriva].