
Blessing of Chalk

Today, we honor the first native born saint of the United States of America, Saint Elizabeth Ann Seton, with a liturgical memorial. She arrived arrived in Baltimore on June 16, 1808 taking up residence on Paca Street. Saint Elizabeth Ann would also profess her first vows as a woman religious in the presence of Bishop John Carroll. Seton would go on to be one of the greatest saints of America and religious educators.
“Let your chief study be to acquaint yourself with God because there is nothing greater than God, and because it is the only knowledge which can fill the Heart with a Peace and joy, which nothing can disturb.” (St. Elizabeth Ann Seton)
“You shall call His name Jesus, for He shall save His people from their sins.”
The Latin Church has today as the Feast of the Holy Name of Jesus; it is historically associated with the Feast of the Circumcision of Jesus celebrated on the 8th Day of Christmas, January 1. Both the Latin and Eastern Churches have the Feast of the Circumcision of Jesus. It is not only the shedding of skin but the giving of the name according to Jewish Law thus making the baby a member of God’s household committed to the Covenant.
We know that the name ‘Jesus’ means ‘God Saves’ and is the name that St. Joseph was instructed by an angel to name the Child. By Divine Will, it is the sacred name before which “every knee should bend, in heaven and on earth and under the earth, and every tongue should confess that Jesus Christ is Lord, to the glory of God the Father” (Phil. 2:10-11). The only name that saves.
Devotion to the Most Holy Name of Jesus was popularized by the Franciscan St. Bernardine of Siena in the 15th century, often symbolized by the monogram IHS (denoting the first three letters of the Greek spelling of Jesus’ name). The feast was given to the Order of Friars Minor by Clement VI. But it is known by the Cistercians with the preaching of St. Bernard before this time; it is the same monogram that Loyola used for the Jesuits. By 1721, Innocent XII gave the feast of the Holy Name to the entire Church as the Emperor Charles VI.
Today the feast of the Holy Name of Jesus is celebrated on January 3rd. And the month of January is dedicated to the Holy Name.
For me, one of the key figures in English Catholic history is St. Thomas Becket, the famed martyr and archbishop of Canterbury. It is not to say that the other notable figures of Christian history are unimportant or second to Becket, they are not, but Becket is part of a narrative of faith that is eerily contemporary to the Catholic experience for every generation. While Becket’s early life may have been filled with questionable alliances and compromises, after his conversion to Christ and subsequent Church service as archbishop is notable. And that is the key for us: the journey to salvation, no matter at what point in life it is picked up, is significant. You pick your cross and you walk with with it. From the moment Christ enters your heart is THE moment of grace. The moment of conversion is the moment our discipleship with the Lord begins with great flourish. The past is prologue, as it is said.
One thing I learned today is that St. Thomas Becket was slaughtered between the altars of Our Lady and St. Benedict. Note, that the brutal killing of Becket was not at the hands of just a disgruntled person but at the the behest of his former friend and benefactor, King Henry II. It is meaning may be particular to each person but loving the Mother of God and St. Benedict speaks volumes. As Becket himself said, “The whole company of saints bears witness to the unfailing truth that without real effort no one wins the crown.”
So, 1170 will always be relevant. It is the year that Becket met his Savior; it is the year that we ought to reflect upon viz. our own era when Catholic life, for persons and the Christian body, is under assault from various sectors in society.
Let me recommend three books on Becket that come from a friend:
Frank Barlow’s Thomas Becket (1990) and Thomas Becket and His Clerks (1987)
John Butler’s Quest for Becket’s Bones: The Mystery of the Relics of St. Thomas Becket of Canterbury (1995).
What follows is a general listing of various religious orders who admitted new members, professed vows and/or ordained. The purpose is to show how the Lord is working (or not) in many of the communities. Some communities are clearly alive and living the charism of their religious group; and it is equally clear that some groups are dying.
Alexian Brothers
3 clothed in the habit
6 renew temporary vows
Basilian Salvatorian Order, Methuen, MA
1 professed temporary vows
New Skete Monks, Cambridge, NY
1 clothed in the habit
New Skete Nuns, Cambridge, NY
1 clothed in the habit
Christ the Bridegroom Monastery, Burton, OH (Byzantine Catholic nuns)
1 professed life vows
Missionaries of the Holy Apostles, Cromwell, CT
1 admitted to postulancy
2 ordained deacon
Franciscan Handmaids of Mary
1 professed temporary
Franciscan Friars of the Renewal
8 admitted to postulancy
8 clothed in the habit
4 profess temporary vows
2 profess perpetual vows
1 ordained deacon
4 ordained priest
Franciscan Sisters of the Renewal
3 clothed with the habit
Capuchin Friars, St Mary Province, NY
6 men renew temporary vows
Cistercian Abbey of Our Lady of Dallas
2 clothed in the habit
1 professed temporary vows
1 solemn vows
1 ordained deacon
Holy Cross Abbey —OCSO, Berryville, VA
1 admitted postulancy
Christ in the Desert Abbey, Abiquiu, NM
7 clothed in the habit
2 professed simple vows
3 renewed vows
12 solemn vows
1 ordained deacon
Our Lady of the Desert, Blanco, NM
2 professed final vows
1 professed simple vows
1 admitted to postulancy
Mount Saviour Monastery, Pine City, NY
2 admitted to postulancy
1 clothed in the habit
1 professed simple vows
St Scholastica Priory, Petersham, MA
3 clothed in the habit
Monastery of the Holy Cross, Chicago
1 ordained to diaconate
St Meinrad Archabbey, St Meinrad, IN
1 clothed in the habit
2 professed simple vows
1 professed solemn vows
1 ordained priest
Subiaco Abbey, Subiaco, AR
2 ordained priests
Marmion Abbey, Aurora, IL
1 clothed in the habit
2 professed simple vows
1 ordained priest
Mount Angel Abbey, Mt Angel, OR
2 clothed in the habit
4 professed simple vows
3 professed solemn vows
St Joseph Abbey, Covington, LA
2 clothed in the habit
Conception Abbey, Conception, MO
3 clothed in the habit
St Vincent Archabbey, Latrobe, PA
4 clothed in the habit
4 professed simple vows
2 professed solemn vows
2 ordained priest
St Bernard Abbey, Cullman, AL
3 clothed in the habit
3 professed solemn vows
1 ordained priest
Mary, Help of Christians Abbey, Belmont, NC
1 admitted to postulancy
1 clothed in the habit
1 professed solemn vows
Mary, Mother of the Church Abbey, Richmond, VA
1 admitted to postulancy
Assumption Abbey, Richardton, ND
1 professed simple vows
St Mary’s Abbey, Morristown, NJ
1 clothed in the habit
1 professed simple vows
St Gregory’s Abbey, Shawnee, OK
1 admitted to postulancy
St Anselm Abbey, Manchester, NH
1 admitted to postulancy
3 clothed in the habit
1 professed simple vows
1 professed solemn vows
St Leo Abbey, St Leo, FL
1 professed simple vows
1 professed solemn vows
St Procopius Abbey, Lisle, IL
1 professed simple vows
St John’s Abbey, Collegeville, MN
1 professed simple vows
1 clothed in the habit
St Andrew Abbey, Cleveland, OH
1 clothed in the habit
1 ordained deacon
1 ordained priest
St Benedict’s Abbey, Atchison, KS
2 admitted to postulancy
2 clothed in the habit
2 professed simple vows
1 professed solemn vows
2 ordained deacon
Newark Abbey, Newark, NJ
1 admitted to postulancy
1 professed simple vows
St Martin’s Abbey, Lacey, WA
1 admitted to postulancy
St Anselm Abbey, Washington, DC
1 ordained deacon
St Gregory the Great Abbey, Portsmouth, RI
1 professed simple vows
Abbey of Regina Laudis, Bethlehem, CT
1 clothed in the habit
others in formation
3 given the Consecration of Virgins
Abbey of Our Lady of Ephesus, Gower, MO
10 in the novitiate
8 admitted to postulancy
5 junior professed
Immaculate Heart of Mary Monastery, Westfield, VT
1 professed simple vows (an extern sister)
Glencairn Abbey, Ireland (Trappistines)
2 postulants admitted
2 professed solemn vows
Tautra Mariakloster, Norway (Trappistines)
2 professed simple vows
Mount Saint Mary Abbey, Wrentham, MA (Trappistines)
3 admitted to postulancy
2 professed simple vows
1 professed solemn vows
Order of Preachers —Province of St. Joseph
16 clothed with the habit
9 professed simple vows
11 professed solemn vows
9 ordained priest
6 ordained deacon
Order of Preachers —Province of St. Albert the Great
1 professed simple vows
1 professed solemn vows
Our Lady of Grace Monastery —Order of Preachers, North Guilford, CT
1 admitted to postulancy, then novitiate
1 professed simple vows
Dominican Sisters of Hawthorne, Hawthorne, NY
2 clothed in the habit
2 renewed their vows
Dominicans of the Immaculate Conception, Chicago, IL
1 admitted to postulancy
Dominican Sisters of Mary, Mother of the Eucharist, Ann Arbor, MI
12 clothed in the habit
6 professed simple vows
7 professed perpetual vows
Dominican Missionaries for the Deaf Apostolate, New Britain, CT
3 admitted to postulancy
4 clothed in the habit
1 final profession
1 ordained priest
Society of Jesus
40 entered the Provinces in the USA, Canada, and Haiti
27 ordained priests for the States, Canada and Haiti
26 professed simple perpetual vows for the USA & Canada
Apostles of the Sacred Heart of Jesus, Hamden, CT
4 admitted to postulancy
1 clothed in the habit
3 professed simple vows
5 renew vows
1 professed perpetual vows
Sisters of Life
6 clothed in the habit
4 renewed vows
7 professed simple vows
8 professed perpetual vows
Maryknoll Sisters
4 professed perpetual vows
Congregation of Norbertine Sisters, California
2 admitted to postulancy
2 professed simple vows
Abbey of Santa Maria de la Vid –Norbertines
1 clothed in the habit
St Norbert Abbey, Norbertines, DePere, WI
1 clothed in the habit
2 professed simple vows
1 professed solemn vows
1 ordained deacon
1 ordained priest
Abbey of Saint Michael, Norbertines, CA
1 ordained priest
? enter the novitiate
Legion of Christ
7 professed simple vows
11 clothed with the habit
9 to be ordained to priesthood scheduled for May 4, 2019
Order of Virgins
several made their consecration as Virgins in particular dioceses in the USA
Today is the feast of Innocent Martyrs, the children who in Bethlehem of Judas were killed by the unholy King Herod. Their shed blood was for the Son of God and Savior, and for us.
The Holy Innocents have been honored by the Church as martyrs since the first centuries. Today, their import keeps us vigilant on threats to human life, from conception to natural death. The Innocents are the witnesses to the Pro-Life work we are engaged in. They bring us into relationship with Christ and humanity at a deeper level.
Let the final word be just as Saint Thérèse would have it: Nisi efficiamini sicut parvuli (Unless you become like unto little children. Mt 18:3)
NB: The Byzantine Church (UGCC) this feast on December 29.
Today we celebrate the Nativity of Our Lord and Savior, Jesus. Son of God, Son of Mary. The Prince of Peace.
In an era of great confusion and unrest due to natural disasters, presence of refugees, political and religious distractions, our celebration of the birth of the Lord hopefully will re-focus our attention on the desire that God has for us: that His Divine Presence will change our lives. This is my hope.
Blessed Christmas!
How must we live in order to be, or to become, capable of happiness? The question is one which ought to occupy us nowadays more than ever before. Man should take his happiness as seriously as takes himself. And he ought to believe God and his own heart when, even in distress and trouble, he has an intuitive feeling that he was created for happiness.
But this entails certain clear convictions. For a full and satisfying life man must know what it is all about. He must have no doubts about being on the right road with all the saints to back him up, and divine strength to support him. Such a life is a dedicated one, conscious of being blessed and touched by God himself.
Prison Meditations of Fr. Alfred Delp
Alfred Delp, SJ
“Who are you, O Immaculate Conception?” asks St Maximillian Maria Kolbe, the 20th century martyr and saint who founded a Marian movement. Accordingly, he teaches us, based on his prayer and experience, that the perfect love of the Holy Trinity meets an adequate response in the perfect love of the Immaculate, which is the name St Maximilian gives to the Blessed Virgin Mary. In another place he says, “In the union of the Holy Spirit with her, not only does love bind these two beings, but the first of them [the Holy Spirit] is all the love of the Most Holy Trinity, while the second [the Blessed Virgin Mary] is all the love of creation, and thus in that union heaven is joined to earth, the whole heaven with the whole earth, the whole of Uncreated Love with the whole of created love: this is the vertex of love.”
St Maximillian gave us a mature perspective of Mary under this title.
The dogma of the Immaculate Conception of the Blessed Virgin Mary was declared and defined by Bl. Pius IX in 1854: “The most Blessed Virgin Mary was, from the first moment of her conception, by a singular grace and privilege of almighty God and by virtue of the merits of Jesus Christ, Savior of the human race, preserved immune from all stain of original sin.” (Ineffabilis Deus )
Since Mary under the title of the Immaculate Conception let us pray for our nation today.