christianityreligion

My dear brothers and sisters in Christ – February 2026

From the Bishop I would like to share with you some reflections on giving, as understood from the teachings and traditions of the Church. Within these diocesan initiatives and the liturgical season, there are two aspects of giving from the Old Testament and the life of Jesus that I would like to focus on: creation and sacrifice. They are interconnected and pivotal for true giving of ourselves. The first gift that God gave humanity was the breath of life, spoken of in Genesis. Our lives are among the greatest creations of God, as we are made in his image and likeness. Just so, we are called to breathe life into the world around us, especially in the lives of our neighbors. In caring for them with our talents and best efforts, we truly “gift” as God intends us to. I urge you to give by doing good at every opportunity. As St. John Bosco said, “Do not send to tomorrow the good you can do today.”And in creating, we are called to sacrifice first of the “good fruits” of our lives. Just as it is said in the Book of Proverbs, “Honor the LORD with your wealth, with first fruits of all your produce; Then will your barns be filled with plenty, with new wine your vats will overflow” (3: 9-10). Jesus displayed this most clearly on the wood of the cross. Charity is considered a “theological virtue,” a foundational pillar of God’s law and order among his creations. Christ teaches us that we must give radically of ourselves, even to those who call themselves our enemies. Despite our feelings, we are to bear each other to Jesus and do so for God’s honor alone, not ours. This month, I ask that you reflect on the life of one saint that you admire and consider how he or she created and sacrificed for the glory of God. I also ask that you review paragraphs 1822-29 of the Catechism of the Catholic Church to better understand our shared and universal faith. Please be assured of my prayers for you during this penitential season.“Let us show Christ honor, not with olive branches but with the splendor of merciful deeds to one another” (St. Andrew of Crete). In Christ’s love, Most Rev. Jacques Fabre-Jeune, CSBishop of Charleston.

artreligion

Praying any way we can

Family Matters St. Paul’s admonition that we ought to “pray always” (1 Thes 5: 17) might also be translated as practical advice that we pray any way we can. Aside from that, we can fall back on our favorite devotions and perhaps increase them: rosaries, novenas, the Divine Mercy Chaplet and so on. There are times when various arts and crafts, too, can prove to be fruitful ways of praying. The brother-in-law of one of the sisters in my Sts. Cyril and Methodius community carved crucifixes, images of saints and religious symbols all gifted to individuals and to at least one basilica. Carving was, he said, his way of praying as he retired from business and cared for his blind wife. A religious education director I worked with in Michigan turned to visual art when she found that her regular prayer routines were leaving her cold. She drew and painted landscapes in praise of God the Creator and then began creating charcoal and pastel images of biblical figures and saints. Works depicting Abraham and Anna the prophetess are among works she has bestowed on a Catholic assisted living facility. And then there are the quilters and knitters. Some few quilters have told me that they pray with and over every square in their quilts. Prayer shawls are created by groups who share them with those confined to nursing and rehabilitation facilities. Cross-stitch, bead work, calligraphy, sculpting and even LEGO constructions can lend themselves to memorabilia that lift minds and hearts to God. Instrumental music, singing and interpretative dance have also been counted among art forms that can become acts of praise and thanks, contrition and supplication. Not surprisingly, praying on paper has been a favored form of mine. I have spent no little amount of time on academic writing and, for the past 10 years, writing regular newspaper and magazine columns. It’s not that those are not prayerful, but I find that I am most tuned in, baring my soul to the Lord, when I journal or write poetry. I don’t make journal entries or compose poems on my laptop. I handwrite or sometimes print them mainly because my legibility, even to myself, seems to have decreased as I am becoming more vintage than youthful. It has been gratifying for me to delve into the works of some of the women mystics of the Middle Ages: St. Mechthild of Magdeburg, St. Hildegard of Bingen (artist, musician, writer and doctor of the Church) and St. Julian of Norwich. All have left essays, prose meditations and poems that display their prayerfulness. So many saints from the Eastern and Western Church have left us liturgical and devotional prayers. The super-prolific St. Thomas Aquinas, noted for his reasoned theological tomes, comes through strongly as a man of poetry. Come Holy Thursday, we will be praying his great Pange lingua. As we are often reminded, including by our own bishop, genuine faith is a matter of the heart. The work of our hands, our movement and our breath can also be, this Lent and at any other time, acts of faith.

religion

Almighty God Cries Out in PERFECT Love! Be ETERNALLY Rescued America FROM ETERNAL Ruin!

In these increasingly debauched and licentious days, Almighty God calls for all to be saved and delivered from the wrath to come (1 Tim. 2: 4; 2 Pet. 3: 9). Have you received into your heart and life the Savior of the world the Lord Jesus Christ as your personal Savior from your transgressions against Almighty God and His RIGHTEOUSNESS? “For God so loved the world, that he gave his only begotten Son, that whosoever believeth in him should not perish, but have everlasting life. For God sent not his Son into the world to condemn the world; but that.

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