FG#4 Interior Freedom episode 4 – Fountains of Grace with Donna Garrett

FG#4 – Interior Freedom episode 2- Fountains of Grace: reflections on contemporary spiritual classics with Donna GarrettDonna

Join host Donna Garrett, with Fr. Daniel Brandenburg, LC, as they discuss the spiritual classic “Interior Freedom” by Fr.  Jacques Philippe  a priest of  Communaute des Beatitudes, an international association of the faithful of Pontifical Right founded in France in 1973.  The members of the Community, which has a contemplative vocation based on Carmelite spirituality, are actively engaged in the service of the poor and the proclamation of the Gospel.

Discussed in this episode, among other topics,  from “Interior Freedom” page 75

Donna Garrett is joined in this particular series by Fr. Daniel Brandenburg, LC
Donna Garrett is joined in this particular series by Fr. Daniel Brandenburg, LC
“Let us ask ourselves this question, to what degree can the evil in my surroundings effect me? With the apologies to those I am going to scandalize,I say that the evil around us- the sins of others, of people in the church, of society-does not become an evil for us unless we let Him penetrate our hearts. The point isn’t that we should become indifferent. Just the opposite. The holier we are the more we will suffer due to the evil and sin in the world. But external evil only harms us to the degree we react badly to it, by fear, worry discouragement, sadness,giving up, rushing to apply hasty solutions that don’t solve anything judging, fostering bitterness and resentment, refusing to forgive and so on. Jesus say in St Mark’s Gospel, There is nothing outside of man which going into him can defile him but the things which come out of a man are what defile him. Harm does not come to us(our souls) from external circumstances, but from how we react to them interiorly.”

Interior-Freedom
You can find “Interior Freedom” here

 

Fr.-Philippe
Fr. Jacques Philippe

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FG#6 Interior Freedom episode 6 – Fountains of Grace with Donna Garrett

FG#6 – Interior Freedom episode 6- Fountains of Grace: reflections on contemporary spiritual classics with Donna GarrettDonna

Join host Donna Garrett, with Fr. Daniel Brandenburg, LC, as they discuss the spiritual classic “Interior Freedom” by Fr.  Jacques Philippe  a priest of  Communaute des Beatitudes, an international association of the faithful of Pontifical Right founded in France in 1973.  The members of the Community, which has a contemplative vocation based on Carmelite spirituality, are actively engaged in the service of the poor and the proclamation of the Gospel.

Discussed in this episode, among other topics,  from “Interior Freedom” page 84

Donna Garrett is joined in this particular series by Fr. Daniel Brandenburg, LC
Donna Garrett is joined in this particular series by Fr. Daniel Brandenburg, LC

“We can suffer for Only one Moment.”

This effort to live in the reality of each moment is of the greatest importance in times of suffering. St Therese of Lisieux said during her illness; “ I only suffer for one moment. It is because people think about the past and the future that they become discouraged and despair. Nobody has the capacity to suffer for ten or twenty years; but we have the grace to bear today the suffering that is ours now. Projecting things into the future crushes us not experiencing suffering but anticipating it.”

Interior-Freedom
You can find “Interior Freedom” here

 

Fr.-Philippe
Fr. Jacques Philippe

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ROHC #5 Emotional Suffering and Purgation – Heart of Hope w/ Deacon James Keating Ep. 5 – Discerning Hearts

Heart of Hope Part 5 – Keating-2 The purpose of life,  the suffering of humanity and how it relates to the grace of God.  Emotional Suffering, Purgation,  Christ’s sacrifice on the Cross, and Redemption

Deacon James Keating, PhD, the director of Theological Formation for the Institute for Priestly Formation, located at Creighton University, in Omaha, is making available to ”Discerning Hearts” and all who listen, his series of programs entitled “The Heart of Hope”.

This extraordinarily popular series explores the work of suffering in the Christian life and how God can use it to transform the heart of the individual and the world.

Check out Deacon Keating’s “Discerning Hearts” page

The “Heart of Hope” tackles a very tough subject…the gift of suffering in the Christian life. Deacon Keating guides us well.

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For more information on the “Institute of Priestly Formation” and for other material available by Deacon Keating, just click here

Don’t forget to pickup a copy of “Communion with Christ” , it is one of the best audio sets on prayer…ever!

 

ROHC #4 The Tale of the Two Criminals – Heart of Hope with Deacon James Keating Ep. 4 – Discerning Hearts

Heart of Hope Part 4 – Keating-2 The healing hand of Christ, seeing the will of God, and how we suffer love.  The tale of the two criminals on the cross next to Christ on Gologotha.

Deacon James Keating, PhD, the director of Theological Formation for the Institute for Priestly Formation, located at Creighton University, in Omaha, is making available to ”Discerning Hearts” and all who listen, his series of programs entitled “The Heart of Hope”.

This extraordinarily popular series explores the work of suffering in the Christian life and how God can use it to transform the heart of the individual and the world.

Check out Deacon Keating’s “Discerning Hearts” page

The “Heart of Hope” tackles a very tough subject…the gift of suffering in the Christian life. Deacon Keating guides us well.

.

For more information on the “Institute of Priestly Formation” and for other material available by Deacon Keating, just click here

Don’t forget to pickup a copy of “Communion with Christ” , it is one of the best audio sets on prayer…ever!

 

ROHC #3 Redemptive Suffering – Heart of Hope with Deacon James Keating Ep. 3 – Discerning Hearts

Heart of Hope Part 3 – Keating-2What is Redemptive Suffering…using love and the energy of love to redirect pain as an intercessory prayer for another…how it makes sense and is no longer meaningless

Deacon James Keating, PhD, the director of Theological Formation for the Institute for Priestly Formation, located at Creighton University, in Omaha, is making available to ”Discerning Hearts” and all who listen, his series of programs entitled “The Heart of Hope”.

This extraordinarily popular series explores the work of suffering in the Christian life and how God can use it to transform the heart of the individual and the world.

Check out Deacon Keating’s “Discerning Hearts” page

The “Heart of Hope” tackles a very tough subject…the gift of suffering in the Christian life. Deacon Keating guides us well.

.

For more information on the “Institute of Priestly Formation” and for other material available by Deacon Keating, just click here

Don’t forget to pickup a copy of “Communion with Christ” , it is one of the best audio sets on prayer…ever!

 

ROHC #2 The Cross in the Christian Life – Heart of Hope with Deacon James Keating Ep. 2 – Discerning Hearts

Heart of Hope Part 2 – Keating-2The agony of emotional suffering and opportunities for deeper union with Jesus; the reason for pastoral ministry

Deacon James Keating, PhD, the director of Theological Formation for the Institute for Priestly Formation, located at Creighton University, in Omaha, is making available to ”Discerning Hearts” and all who listen, his series of programs entitled “The Heart of Hope”.

This extraordinarily popular series explores the work of suffering in the Christian life and how God can use it to transform the heart of the individual and the world.

The “Heart of Hope” tackles a very tough subject…the gift of suffering in the Christian life. Deacon Keating guides us well.

 

.

For more information on the “Institute of Priestly Formation” and for other material available by Deacon Keating, just click here

Don’t forget to pickup a copy of “Communion with Christ” , it is one of the best audio sets on prayer…ever!

Check out Deacon Keating’s “Discerning Heart” page

BKL#18 – Building a Kingdom of Love w/ Msgr. John Esseff – Suffering, Dying, and Rising with Jesus

Msgr. Esseff remembers his encounters with St. Padre Pio.   He also reflects on the Gospel for this particular Msgr. John EsseffSunday, which places its focus on the suffering, death and rising of Jesus.  That this world is not our “forever” destiny.   We were created for Eternal Life.  Now will it forever in Heaven or will it forever separation from God in Hell.  The central act of Jesus Christ was to suffer, die and rise.  It takes the deepest wounds that we and redeems it.  In today’s world, we will suffer in the Paschal Mystery in order to witness the glory of God to the world.  He shares the compelling story of a boy named Eddie Walsh who is a tremendous witness of the Gospel Truth.

From the NAB  Mk 9:30-37

 Jesus and his disciples left from there and began a journey through Galilee,
but he did not wish anyone to know about it.
He was teaching his disciples and telling them,
“The Son of Man is to be handed over to men
and they will kill him,
and three days after his death the Son of Man will rise.”
But they did not understand the saying,
and they were afraid to question him.

They came to Capernaum and, once inside the house,Msgr. John Esseff
he began to ask them,
“What were you arguing about on the way?”
But they remained silent.
They had been discussing among themselves on the way
who was the greatest.
Then he sat down, called the Twelve, and said to them,
“If anyone wishes to be first,
he shall be the last of all and the servant of all.”
Taking a child, he placed it in the their midst,
and putting his arms around it, he said to them,
“Whoever receives one child such as this in my name, receives me;
and whoever receives me,
receives not me but the One who sent me.”

 

Msgr. John A. Esseff is a Roman Catholic priest in the Diocese of Scranton.  He was ordained on May 30th 1953, by the late Bishop William J. Hafey, D.D. at St. Peter’s Cathedral in Scranton, PA.  Msgr. Esseff served a retreat director and confessor to Blessed Mother Teresa.    He continues to offer direction and retreats for the sisters of the missionaries of charity around the world.  Msgr. Esseff encountered St.  Padre Pio,  who would become a spiritual father to him.  He has lived in areas around the world,  serving  in the Pontifical missions, a Catholic organization established by Bl. Pope John Paul II to bring the Good News to the world especially to the poor.  Msgr. Esseff assisted the founders of the Institute for Priestly Formation and continues to serve as a spiritual director for the Institute.  He continues to  serve as a retreat leader and director to bishops, priests and sisters and seminarians and other religious leaders around the world.   

 

 

To obtain a copy of Msgr. Esseff’s book byvisiting here

 

Be sure to visit Msgr. Esseff’s website “Building a Kingdom of  Love

 

ROHC #5 Deacon James Keating – Heart of Hope part 5 – Discerning Hearts

Heart of Hope Part 5 – the purpose of life,  the suffering of humanity and how it relates to the grace of God.  Emotional Suffering, Purgation,  Christ’s sacrifice on the Cross, and Redemption.


Deacon James Keating, PhD, the director of Theological Formation for the Institute for Priestly Formation, located at Creighton University, in Omaha, is making available to “Discerning Hearts” and all who listen, his series of programs entitled “The Heart of Hope”.

This extraordinarily popular series explores the work of suffering in the Christian life and how God can use it to transform the heart of the individual and the world. 

The “Heart of Hope”  tackles a very tough subject…the gift of suffering in the Christian life.  Deacon Keating guides us well.

 

For more information on the “Institute of Priestly Formation” and for other material available by Deacon Keating, just click here

Don’t forget to pickup a copy of “Communion with Christ” , it is one of the best audio sets on prayer…ever!

Check out Deacon Keating’s “Discerning Heart” page

“You’ll always have the gift and you’ll always have the cross.” – a reflection by Msgr. John Esseff – Discerning Hearts

Msgr. Esseff shares a poignant reflection on rejection, loss, suffering, and aloneness.  We experience various forms of suffering, but as it is said “success has a hundred mothers, failure is an orphan”.  Why is the cross so important to those who are united with Him?  Its in the cross that we experience His presence.  He shares a very compelling story he was given permission to share, which concerns a Sister, Mother Teresa, anger, forgiveness and love…it’s a heartbreaking tale…one where ultimately love prevails.  ”You’ll always have the gift and you’ll always have the cross.” – Bl. Mother Teresa

 

 

To obtain a copy of Msgr. Esseff’s book byvisiting here

 

Be sure to visit Msgr. Esseff’s website “Building a Kingdom of  Love

 

St. Andre Bessette – God’s Doorkeeper…holding the door open for the rest of us

“Do not try to have your trials taken away from you, rather, ask for the grace to endure them well”.

Pope Benedict XVI at St. Andre’s caniozation –

“Brother André Bessette, born in Quebec, in Canada, and a religious of the Congregation of the Holy Cross, knew suffering and poverty very early in life. This led him to turn to God for prayer and an intense interior life. Doorman at the Notre Dame College in Montreal, he showed boundless charity and did everything possible to soothe the despair of those who confided in him. With little instruction, he nevertheless understood what was essential to his faith. For him, to believe meant to submit freely and lovingly to Divine Will. Everything existed through the mystery of Jesus, he lived the beatitude of the pure of heart, that of personal rectitude. It is thanks to this simplicity, he showed many God. He had the Saint Joseph Oratory of Mont Royal built, where he was the faithful guardian until his death in 1937. There, he was the witness of many healings and conversions. “Do not try to have your trials taken away from you”, he said, “rather, ask for the grace to endure them well”. For him, everything spoke of God and His presence. May we, following his example, search for God with simplicity to discover Him always present in the core of our lives! May the example of Brother André inspire Canadian Christian life!”

Heres is a wonderful post by

by Fr. Andrew Gawrych, CSC
Associate Director, US Office of Vocations
Notre Dame, IN

The Seven Crosses of St. Andre Bessette

Growing up, I feared that my life might be meaningless.  In fact, it was the search for a truth and a love that could give my life eternal meaning that led me into the arms of Jesus and of the Church.  Eventually, on March 29, 2010, I became a priest in the Congregation of Holy Cross – the same religious family of Brother André Bessette.One of the main lessons I have drawn from my saintly brother is that no life is meaningless in God.  There were countless reasons why Brother André’s life should have ended up meaningless, and yet here we are celebrating his canonization.  His life is the powerful story of how our crosses can be borne as a gift and transformed into our hope for true meaning and life.  I invite you to join me in praying with this hero of our faith so that our lives, like his, might take on an eternal, life-giving meaning.

1. The Cross of Low Expectations

Brother André Brother André, the expectations for you couldn’t have been lower.  They baptized you the day after your birth because they did not think you would survive.  Later on, your physical frailty and lack of education made others expect so little of you, leaving for you only the more menial tasks like tending the door.  Yet you fulfilled these simple tasks with such great love, exceeding the expectations of everyone.  Intercede for us so that God may grant us the same courage to overcome our world’s paltry expectations of us.  May we achieve the true greatness of holiness for which God lovingly created us.

2. The Cross of Wandering

Brother André at the age of 26 Brother André, you knew what it was like to wander through this life.  While still young, you were orphaned and forced from your home.  For many years, you journeyed from town to town and job to job, even leaving your homeland for the textile mills in the United States, in search of a new home.  You only found your home in this life when Divine Providence led you to your vocation to the religious life in the Congregation of Holy Cross.  Intercede for us that we may allow God to guide us towards the vocation to which we are called.  May we, too, find our homes in this life.

3. The Cross of Rejection

Brother André Brother André, you knew what it was like to be rejected.  Your own religious family of Holy Cross did not accept you at first.  You yourself said, “When I first arrived to the college, I was shown the door … and I remained there for forty years!”  Yet even more painfully, when the Lord chose you to be His healing hand in others’ lives, you incurred the misunderstanding and rejection of those who failed to see God’s greatness through you.  Intercede for us, so that we may have the same strength in the face of ridicule.  May we remain steadfast to the mission God has entrusted to us to bring Him glory.

4. The Cross of Others’ Suffering

Brother André healing the sick, crutches Brother André, you truly knew the weight of others’ suffering.  As news of the healings spread, more and more people came to you, often expecting a miraculous cure.  Their burdens became your burdens; their crosses became your crosses.  Your ministry exacted its toll on you, draining your strength and patience and even bringing you to tears.  You revealed to those suffering the hope of the Cross of Christ, the hope of the God who is always with us in our need.  Intercede for us so that we may be able to enter into others’ sufferings and bear their crosses with them.  May we unleash the healing hope of the Crucified One.

5. The Cross of Setbacks

Saint Joseph Oratory Montreal Candles Brother André, even the works God accomplished through your life did not come without their setbacks.  At many times during the construction of the Oratory dedicated to your patron St. Joseph, it seemed that the ambitious project would never be completed.  Yet you continued to place your trust in Divine Providence.  You even had a statue of St. Joseph placed under the unfinished roof so he could raise the remaining funds.  And defying all predictions, St. Joseph did just that!  Intercede for us so that we may have the same faith in Providence.  May the setbacks of our life not distract us from fulfilling God’s will.

6. The Cross of Our Own Suffering

Brother André Brother André, from your birth and throughout your life, your health was frail.  Rarely did you eat more than bread dipped in watered-down milk or soup.  You knew physical suffering and its seeming meaninglessness that afflicted the many broken and ill people who came to you.  But in God, your weakness became your strength, letting you enter more deeply into the hurts and pains of others.  You journeyed in faith with them through the Cross to new life in Christ.  Intercede for us so that we may be able to transform our weaknesses into strengths.  May our sufferings be transformed into a redemptive balm in the lives of others.

7. The Cross of Death

Brother André Brother André, like all of us since our ancestors Adam and Eve, you had to bear the ultimate cross of death.  But death was not the end of your life or your life’s story.  Battling the cold, over a million people came from far and wide to pay their last respects.  Your funeral was just the preview of the millions who continue to visit the Oratory each year, as well as the many ministries to the poor and the sick that bear your name throughout the world.  Intercede for us so that we, too, may have life in God and produce an even greater harvest for God’s people.  May we, too, lay down our lives in such a way that we can be counted among the saints.