Category: Live in Christ

The Church Wasn't Meant to be the "Cool Mom"
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The Church Wasn’t Meant to be the “Cool Mom”

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When I was asked to share my perspective on the HHS mandate, I thought there must be a mistake. Surely folks would rather hear from a good Catholic. A perfectly NFP-practicing, saved herself for marriage—five, six, seven-kid-having Catholic woman. That hasn’t exactly been my path. Not to mention, what could I possibly add to the […]

You Are What You Do / Say / Think….
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You Are What You Do / Say / Think….

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I read once that when a neurosurgeon touches a spot on the human brain with a probe, he elicits memories.  All kinds of memories: a moment in childhood, a school day, a family vacation from years past.  Sights, sounds, tastes, smells, feelings.  Pain and pleasure, fear and fury and fun.  Whatever is stored on that particular […]

Making Good Decisions, Part 2
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Making Good Decisions, Part 2

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Last week, we talked about making good decisions — God’s way. I want to follow up on that. One may ask, “How does a Bible verse that is so abstract make sense regarding my finances.” The fact is that it does have an impact, financially and spiritually. One of the key components in our relationship […]

Fasting That Can Help Your Love Life
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Fasting That Can Help Your Love Life

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Lent is a time when we make an attempt to address things about our corporeal and spiritual lives that need addressing. Many give up sweets as a gesture of putting aside objectively good things associated with feasting to live the days of mourning in preparation for when they will feast again at Easter. Some attempt […]

3-Minute Retreat: Marked with Salvation
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3-Minute Retreat: Marked with Salvation

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The brief reflection below is based on a 3-Minute Lenten retreat brought to you by Loyola Press. At the bottom of this reflection is a link for you to access the retreat. About 10 years ago Sarah, my Downs syndrome daughter, was asked to the senior prom by Chris, a disabled boy she had known […]

Love Is the Thing, Even if I Want to Judge
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Love Is the Thing, Even if I Want to Judge

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If you, LORD, kept a record of sins, Lord, who could stand? But with you there is forgiveness, so that we can, with reverence, serve you. ~ Psalm 130:3-4 I’m working on not being so judgmental. I wonder why I judge people, what the need is to reckon another person’s rectitude with God. It’s a […]

Reflections for Sunday, March 18, 2012
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Reflections for Sunday, March 18, 2012

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Meditation and Questions for Reflection or Group Discussion (2 Chronicles 36:14-16,19-23; Psalm 137:1-6; Ephesians 2:4-10; John 3:14-21) Thanking and Praising God for his Great Love and Mercy “God, who is rich in mercy.” (Ephesians 2:4) Heavenly Father, how great is your love! I am amazed at the depth of your mercy toward me. Your love […]

Lent: A Time to Say Yes to Following Jesus
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Lent: A Time to Say Yes to Following Jesus

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Jesus went out and saw a tax collector named Levi sitting at the customs post. He said to him, “Follow me.” And leaving everything behind, he got up and followed him. (Luke 5:27-28) As he was walking by the Sea of Galilee, he saw two brothers, Simon who is called Peter, and his brother Andrew, […]

Making Good Decisions, Part 1
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Making Good Decisions, Part 1

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Every day we make several decisions. They range from making the decision to get out of bed in the morning instead of hitting the “snooze” button, to making some major decision.  Whether we are talking about our finances or any other decision, how do we discern the will of God? In the Compass Catholic classes […]

Where Angels Fear to Tread: A Response to Andrea Tornielli on Medjugorje
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Where Angels Fear to Tread: A Response to Andrea Tornielli on Medjugorje

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I read with interest Andrea Tornielli’s article on Medjugorje dated February 28, 2012.[i]  At the end, I was shocked to find that Tornielli provided a Latin-Italian translation of the Vatican document “Normae S. Congregationis.”  My shock was rooted in the fact that the Latin text of this document has escaped the public eye for 34 […]

The Meaning of Mercy (Part I)
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The Meaning of Mercy (Part I)

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The Second Vatican Council taught us that the Eucharist is the “source and summit” of the Christian life.  Yet we must keep in mind that the same council makes clear that the Eucharist is not the sum total of the Christian life. Indeed the Eucharist, and all the sacraments, are memorials of a dramatic act […]

Overcoming the Merely Therapeutic: Human Excellence and the Moral Life
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Overcoming the Merely Therapeutic: Human Excellence and the Moral Life

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In Soul Searching: The Religious and Spiritual Lives of American Teenagers (2005), researchers Christian Smith and Melinda Lundquist Denton argue that for many young adults in America, the spiritual life is understood in moralistic terms. But where orthodox (and Orthodox) Christianity focus on the necessity of “repentance from sin, of keeping the Sabbath, of living as a servant of a sovereign divine, […]

3-Minute Retreat: Called to Greater Freedom
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3-Minute Retreat: Called to Greater Freedom

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The brief reflection below is based on a 3-Minute Lenten retreat brought to you by Loyola Press. At the bottom of this reflection is a link for you to access the retreat. In today’s reflection, Jesus invites a rich man to invest in eternity. Give to the poor and you will have treasure in heaven… […]

Lenten Meditation: He Hath Made Him to be Sin for Us
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Lenten Meditation: He Hath Made Him to be Sin for Us

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Over the centuries, Christian artists have produced innumerable portrayals of the Lord’s crucifixion, but none so terrible as Matthias Grunewald’s Isenheim Altarpiece, a work at once transfixing and repulsive. The middle panel of the Isenheim triptych features Christ, pallid and emaciated and thorn-pierced, pinned to the tree. It is truly a garish scene, torn from […]

Rome in Lent: Like a Mist
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Rome in Lent: Like a Mist

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A quiet time in Rome, the end of February. A time of silence. This evening in a completely empty and silent Vatican, I had the rare experience of running into a little child inside the city. He was walking with his father near the back of the basilica. The child’s mother, a member of the […]

40 Ways to Get the Most out of Lent
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40 Ways to Get the Most out of Lent

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This, of course, is not an exhaustive list of Lenten ideas.  But it’s a start!  Many of the resources mention here are available on our website at www.crossroadsinitiative.com or can be found by visiting our links page. 1 Take 30 minutes to pray, ask the Holy Spirit’s guidance, look over this list, and make a […]

The Ship of the Soul
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The Ship of the Soul

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Gustavus Adolphus is known as one of the greatest kings Sweden has ever had.  He was very proud of Swedish power, and during his reign he triumphed over armies of what today are known as the nations of  Germany, Poland, Denmark, Finland, modern Sweden and other areas.    He ruled very powerful armies, but was a […]

Get Out of Your Spiritual Comfort Zone
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Get Out of Your Spiritual Comfort Zone

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I am a creature of habit. I tend to exercise the same way, eat the same things, and engage in the same activities. When I go for a walk, I usually take the same route. My work, though varied, normally involves the same type of tasks. I get up and go to bed at the […]

The Way of the Cross: Christian Living During Lent
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The Way of the Cross: Christian Living During Lent

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I’m not strong enough. Imagine if these were the words you told Christ when He asked you to take up your Cross and follow him. St. Mark’s Gospel reminds of us this very notion where Christ provides us with His unique blueprint on discipleship: And he called to him the multitude with his disciples, and […]

Keeping the Fast: Spiritual Fitness for Lent
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Keeping the Fast: Spiritual Fitness for Lent

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It is a well-founded observation:  More Catholics come to Church on Ash Wednesday (and Palm Sunday) than they do on Christmas and Easter. Reality, or ‘ecclesiastical legend’?  Although I wish it were different, I see this as a hopeful sign.  It tells me that, as Catholics we want the world to know that we are […]

No Time for Lenten Services? Use the Drive-thru.
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No Time for Lenten Services? Use the Drive-thru.

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A little cramped for time this Ash Wednesday? No problem. An Ohio Methodist minister, Rev. Patricia Anderson Cook, has found the solution for busy Christians on this holy day: Drive-thru ashes and reflection. From 5-6pm EST on Ash Wednesday, Rev. Cook, pastor of Mt. Healthy United Methodist Church, will be out in her church parking […]

He Stretched Forth His Hand
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He Stretched Forth His Hand

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The beginning of Mark’s gospel contains a revealing and prophetic encounter between Jesus and a leper. We are told: “And there came a leper to Him, beseeching Him, and kneeling down said to Him: If Thou wilt, Thou canst make me clean. And Jesus having compassion on him, stretched forth His hand; and touching him, […]

Reflections for Sunday, February 26, 2012
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Reflections for Sunday, February 26, 2012

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Meditation and Questions for Reflection or Group Discussion (Genesis 9:8-15; Psalm 25:4-9; 1 Peter 3:18-22; Mark 1:12-15) Lent, A Time to Experience Victory in our Battle Against Temptation and Sin It is … an appeal to God for a clear conscience.” (1 Peter 3:21) While St. Peter is describing the Sacrament of Baptism here, he […]

Bringing Souls to Jesus through the Four Men Prayer Groups
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Bringing Souls to Jesus through the Four Men Prayer Groups

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I would like to introduce you to an exciting new men’s prayer group based on the Gospel of Mark’s story of Four Men who brought their paralyzed friend to Jesus for healing.  Through their faith they obtained their friends’ healing and the even greater miracle of the forgiveness of his sins.  Members of this prayer […]