Bless my continued Lent;
I give thanks for my community.
Bless my travel;
I give thanks for my safety and well being.
Bless my family as I leave
and keep them safe.
Bless my baby off to work.
Bless my others off to play.
I give thanks for their safety and well being.
Bless my communion,
fraternity, my peace, my muse;
I give thanks for camaraderie.
Bless my meditation;
I give thanks for the time to discern.
Bless my sacred space;
I give thanks for that space.
Bless my writing and
bless my co-retreatants.
I give thanks for each and
pray for both the solitude and
the communion.
Thank you, G-d for the opportunity.
I am eternally in your debt.
Amen.
lent
Sundays in Lent – 5th Friday
StandardIn anticipation of next week, today’s virtual pilgrimage is the Via Dolorosa in Jerusalem. This is the actual way that Jesus carried his cross to Calvary; the Stations of the Cross.
https://youtu.be/qc_KzfpGTwU
Sundays in Lent – 5th Thursday
Standard
Palms, stones from Dolwyddelan, St. Anne’s chaplet. (c)2018
Something to contemplate before this weekend’s Palm Sunday Masses.
Sundays in Lent – 5th Wednesday
StandardCollect
Enlighten, O God of compassion, the hearts of your children, sanctified by penance, and in your kindness grant those you stir to a sense of devotion a gracious hearing when they cry out to you. Through our Lord Jesus Christ, your Son, who lives and reigns with you in the unity of the Holy Spirit, one God, for ever and ever. Amen.
Use this liturgical prayer as a journal prompt.
Sundays in Lent – 5th Tuesday
Standard
Wait for the Lord; be strong; be stouthearted, and wait for the Lord! Ps 27 (26):14
Psalm 102 (or Psalm 17) R. O Lord, hear my prayer, and let my cry come to you.
Meditate on these two verses. What are they saying to you? The second one was something I found comfort in at the beginning of my journey towards Christ. It still feels melancholy to me. Is it that way to you or does it feel differently?
Sundays in Lent – 5th Monday
StandardBrothers and sisters: It was not through the law that the promise was made to Abraham and his descendants that he would inherit the world, but through the righteousness that comes from faith.
Romans 4:13
The righteousness that comes through faith. Where do you personally find that righteousness? Is it the righteousness that draws you closer to G-d, to avoid sin, to make your penitential rites? Or is it drawn through the faith that you have in the Word? In G-d?
I have heard Abraham’s name throughout my entire life. It is the very first Bible story that we hear in religious school, followed quickly by Isaac and Jacob, Sarah, Rebecca, Leah, and Rachel. Those seven forefathers and mothers are called upon almost as often, even more than the geneology of Jesus at Easter time. It is as though they are literally part of our families, just above our great-grandparents.
Where does G-d’s covenant with Abraham fit in with your faith?
Sundays in Lent – 5th Sunday
StandardAll, from least to greatest, shall know me, says the Lord, for I will forgive their evildoing and remember their sin no more.
Jer 31:34
I enjoy finding verses that put us all on equal footing. We can say that we’re all the same until we’re blue in the face, but until we can read it in black and white I fear that some will not believe it.
The verse perfectly encapsulates that feeling.
All.
From least to greatest.
All shall know me.
I will forgive their evildoing and remember their sin no more.
I have just come from reconciliation. I try to go once a season, more if there is something significant happening in my life – traveling, going on retreat, teaching a class. My church does a Lenten Penance Service for the parishioners together. You still have the privacy of the confessional, but your penance is said together. There’s music. I find it a very nice way of bringing the community together. Unfortunately, we had a snowstorm on that evening so I wasn’t able to attend, but I was able to make the time today, a week before my retreat, two weeks before Easter to go to reconciliation.
When I went in it didn’t feel like much, but it was the first time that I remembered my act of contrition card (I don’t have it memorized yet.) It was the first time that I made the sign of the cross and said, “bless me father for I have sinned.” It was the first time that I stated when my last confession was without being prompted. It was the first time I didn’t umm through my sins or wrongdoing.
It was the first time it felt normal-ish.
Remember their sin no more.
I go in, close the door, state my sins, talk, receive penance, and then I’m absolved. I don’t have to worry about G-d bringing it up like an ex might continue to remind you of that time you whatevered twenty years ago and that’s why you’re not married now. I also don’t have to worry about my priest remembering. I’m absolved, and it’s gone for both of us. All of us who seek reconciliation.
G-d doesn’t hold anything against us, and we should learn from that to not hold things against ourselves. Once we’re forgiven in the confessional, we should let it go and not feel guilty or bad about it any longer.
On this fifth Sunday of Lent, don’t forget your responsibilities for the Lenten season. Have you gone to reconciliation? Have you stuck by what you’ve given up or abstained from? Have you prayed more? Is there a special devotion that you like to pray to? Mine is Mary, untier of knots. Lent continues for another two weeks. There is still time to find your way. Each day is a new beginning. It’s not too late to start.
Sundays in Lent – 4th Friday
StandardA pilgrimage is one of those things that is encouraged throughout most religions. Each Friday I’ve been trying to offer you a virtual tour of places to take time to visit and meditate and pray on.
St. Patrick’s Cathedral – Armagh
St. Patrick’s Cathedral – Dublin
St. Patrick’s Cathedral – New York City
Down Cathedral and St. Patrick’s gravesite (more of an exterior tour) – Downpatrick
Sundays in Lent – 4th Thursday
StandardWith his feast day approaching in two days, I thought I’d share two photo collages of St. Patrick’s Cathedral in Dublin, Ireland and the adjacent park named forr him where one of the wells attributed to him is commemorated with an engraved stone.

St. Patrick’s Cathedral, Dublin, Ireland. (c)2018

St. Patrick’s Cathedral and St. Patrick’s Park, Dublin, Ireland. (c)2018
Sundays in Lent – 4th Wednesday
StandardJournal prompt:
John 5:30
“I cannot do anything on my own; I judge as I hear, and my judgment is just, because I do not seek my own will but the will of the one who sent me.”