Seasonal

Break My Heart for What Breaks Yours

Break My Heart for What Breaks Yours

Lent invites us to ask the Lord for a new heart—one that sees as He sees and loves as He loves. Through the words of the prophet Isaiah, “a bruised reed he shall not break and a smoldering wick he shall not quench” (Isaiah 42:3), God reveals something of His own Heart. Where we might see weakness, failure, or disappointment, God sees something fragile but precious: a wounded heart still capable of life.

His Silence Was Loud

His Silence Was Loud

This Lent is a good time to delve further into the mystery of St. Joseph. It reveals a mystery brimming over with questions. A mystery still awaiting answers. Yes, biblical authors allude to St. Joseph, but they refer to him in a narrative form. We do not have one word written by him, nor any word attributed to him. There is no quote by St. Joseph in the New Testament and that is stunning!

The Joyful Mysteries of the Rosary through the Eyes of Saint Joseph

The Joyful Mysteries of the Rosary through the Eyes of Saint Joseph

It was Lent. I don’t remember what year exactly. As Carmelite Sisters, we pray the Rosary every day, and like other Catholics throughout the world, because it was Monday, I knew it as the day for the “Joyful Mysteries” of the Rosary… Somehow or other I got the idea of “Praying the Rosary with St. Joseph” or described in another way – “Praying the Rosary through the Eyes of St. Joseph.”

A Tale of Two Seas

A Tale of Two Seas

Lent. The Holy Land. Mother Luisita. Let’s connect the dots together, because, yes, there is a connection and it contains both a Lenten reminder and an invitation. The other day, I was reflecting on an article I had recently read, The Tale of Two Seas. Its lesson impacted me in a deep way. When I finished reading it, I felt, rather I realized, that it contained a special message for me personally.

Praise God for Fresh Starts

Praise God for Fresh Starts

Each person’s life seems to have a unique theme; at least it seems so to me. This year as we enter the new year before us, I find myself thinking about the patterns in my life, an overarching theme running through its ups and downs.