Saint Joseph the Worker Mt 13, 54-58

In a religious education class, a catechist asked his students to write a short essay on the following topic: ‘Which relic of which saint would you like to have to make your wish come true, and why?’ The catechist laughed while reading one of the essays. One aspiring writer had written, ‘I would like to have a few drops of Saint Joseph’s sweat in a bottle. The reason? Because his sweat would symbolize honest, humble manual labor, he worked hard. In the sweat of his brow, he was able to feed the Son of God, his mother, and himself.’

Today, we honor Saint Joseph the Worker, the foster father of Jesus. On 1 May 1955, Pope Pius XII established the liturgical feast of 1 May in his honour, coinciding with Labour Day. He said: ‘You have a shepherd, defender and father in Saint Joseph the Carpenter, whom God chose through His providence to be the father of Jesus and the head of the Holy Family.’ He is quiet, but has excellent hearing, and his intercession with the Heart of the Saviour is very powerful.

Many of us are familiar with the story of Saint Joseph: from his lengthy genealogy and betrothal to the Virgin Mary, to the angel’s announcement in a dream, the journey to Bethlehem, the Nativity, the presentation of Jesus at the Temple, the flight into Egypt, the return to Nazareth and Jesus’s finding in the Temple. Yet we know very little about him. Only two of the four evangelists mention him, and he is not referenced again in the rest of the New Testament. He is never described or heard from again, and essentially disappears from the narrative after Jesus’ childhood, despite people still referring to the adult Jesus as ‘the son of Joseph’.

Well, not everyone can be a shining star. Joseph’s family includes the Son of God and his wife, the Mother of God. However, it is perhaps Joseph’s hiddenness that is key to understanding him. Like John the Baptist and his parents, and like Simeon and Anna in the temple, he is, in many ways, an Old Testament figure at the crossroads of the Old and New Covenants. He is a devout Jew who embodies the hopes and aspirations of Israel. Unlike the others, however, Joseph stands offstage and disappears completely. For them, it was enough to live. 

God chose Joseph because he was a skilled carpenter. God wanted his incarnate Son to be known as the Son of the Carpenter of Nazareth. Indeed, Jesus himself is the ‘carpenter of the world’ par excellence! He chose to be known as a carpenter because this vocation expresses his mission more vividly than the vocations of a fisherman or a farmer. A fisherman waits for fish to approach the boat, and a farmer waits for plants to grow and bear fruit. But a carpenter does not wait for trees and wood to come to him. He goes to the trees and wood and transforms them into beautiful furniture with his hands and tools. Similarly, Jesus does not wait for people to come to him; he goes where they are. The Gospels summarize his daily activities, in which he does not use many comparisons from the carpentry environment…

However, neither the fisherman nor the farmer can change the fish or the plant. They cannot do anything to alter them. However, the carpenter can transform rough wood into a beautiful work of art. His goal is to create, not destroy. If something breaks, he repairs and restores it to its former glory. Similarly, Jesus transforms everything. He enables the lame to walk, the blind to see, and heals the leper. He even calls the dead to life. He can transform a sinner into a saint.

In short, Jesus’ preparation for his mission began in the humble home of Saint Joseph. Summarize as Pharaoh told the people to go to Joseph, so the Church tells us, ‘Ite ad Ioseph — Go to Joseph!’ This is because Joseph is very close to Jesus, next to the Most Holy Mother.

Through the intercession of the Queen of May and Saint Joseph the Worker, may we be granted the grace to find our way to the Heart of the Lord in times of need.

Posted in Nezaradené | Leave a comment

Fifth Sunday of Easter, Year John 14.1-12

‘The Last Supper’. So much happened during it! First, Jesus bowed down to wash the disciples’ dirty feet, taking on the role of the lowest of the low, and said: ‘As I have done for you, you must do for each other!’ Then came the long ‘farewell speech’, in which he passed on his spiritual testament and the challenge that we, his spiritual disciples, would strive to fulfil throughout our lives: ‘Love one another as I have loved you’, and also: ‘No one has greater love than this, to lay down one’s life for one’s friends’. Even before the fulfilment of his greatest legacy and gift in the Eucharist, painful remarks are heard. ‘Amen, amen, one of you will betray me…’ and to the zealous Peter, after his confident declaration: ‘Peter, Peter, this very night, before the rooster crows, you will deny me three times…’ However, many more words and sentences were uttered on that special evening. One of the excerpts of Christ’s words from this sacred supper is described in today’s Gospel..

It is actually an invitation to embark on a pilgrimage. Not a casual trip, but a demanding pilgrimage full of unexpected obstacles and surprises – a pilgrimage of life.father’s

Jesus begins by telling his disciples that he will soon leave them, which is certainly painful for them, but he immediately adds words of encouragement and consolation: ‘Do not let your hearts be troubled.’ Then he reveals to them the purpose of their life’s journey: ‘I am going to prepare a place for you.’ Where? ‘To my Father’s house, where there are many mansions. ‘ Could I say, ‘I am going to prepare a place for you’? Then I will come again and take you to myself, so that you may be where I am.”

That is Jesus in a nutshell! He reveals a little, excites the disciples, and then veils the hint again in mystery. They keep searching, striving and groping — just like us! In that respect, we are no different to the disciples. It is probably supposed to be that way. We must live in constant vigilance and expectation, searching.

Jesus has just revealed the goal of the disciples’ (and our) earthly journey. To the Father’s house! That is where we will find our rest. We are expected there. There are many dwellings there — yes, even for us! After all, Jesus has gone to prepare them for us.

So the goal is known, but how and where? The provocative Jesus! He says, ‘We know the way!’ It is perhaps impossible to entice more. We know the way? How can we know it? Have we ever walked it? Has Jesus given us a map or a guide? Moreover, there is Thomas, who dares to ask the disciples (and us): ‘Lord, we do not know where you are going. How can we know the way?’

And now it comes! – “I am the way, the truth and the life!”

‘I am the way, the truth, and the life!’ When we stop to think about these words, they can take our breath away. After all, that is the program for a Christian’s life! It is the perfect plan for our journey home to the Father’s house. 

With Christ. In Christ. For Christ. He is the way. The way always leads from one place to another; it has a direction and a destination. We know the goal. However, the path to reach it is full of unknowns. There are many decisions to be made, and given the goal, they are far more important than just whether to turn right or left. There are no direction indicators at the crossroads of our lives and no tourist signs line the path. And yet. Even if we cannot avoid getting lost or falling into a ravine, the basic direction is given. He is Christ. In life, on our journey, so little is actually enough. Ask in the spirit, and best of all in the Holy Spirit: what path would Christ choose in my place now? Of course. We can be wrong; we can often even get lost. But with Christ, we cannot miss the goal. Let us remember Peter walking on the stormy lake. As long as he keeps his eyes on Christ, he keeps walking. But as soon as he looks at the surrounding waves, the storm and the depths below, he begins to sink. If Christ is the path, then we must walk with our gaze fixed on him.

‘I am the truth!’ We will not find truth in learned books or academic debates. Perhaps we can find philosophical truths there. But the truth of life? This can only be found in life itself. And again, only in Christ. After all, he calls himself the truth; he is the truth itself.

Finally: ‘I am life!’ Only the Son of God can truly say this about himself — he who is consubstantial with God and the creator of all living beings. He is life itself; the embodiment of life! He is the one in whom ‘we live and move and have our being’. He gives life with the breath of his mouth. He returns life to the dead and calls them to eternal life. Whenever we speak of life, we speak of Christ.
The statement: ‘I am the way, the truth, and the life!’ is perhaps the greatest statement ever uttered in the history of mankind. And the most essential.

However, Jesus had not finished his speech yet. ‘No one comes to the Father except through me.’ This is indeed confirmed by his previous words. Only with Christ, in Christ, and through Christ can one reach the Father — he himself is the way, the fulfillment, and love incarnate. Without Christ, who is our life, it is truly impossible to reach the Father! But the disciples (and we are not much better) still do not understand. ‘If you had known me, you would have known my Father also. Now you know him and have seen him.’ Poor disciples. They have not yet absorbed one message, and now they are faced with another, even stranger one. How can they know God? After all, ‘no one has ever seen God…’, so how can they know Christ? After all, he is sitting in their midst...

Another divine secret. Fortunately for them — and for us — there is another daredevil who does not hide his confusion and lack of understanding. “Lord, show us the Father — that is enough for us.” Oh, Philip, Philip! “Have I been with you so long, and yet you still do not know me?” They know Christ; they recognize his face, his voice, and his unique gestures. They also know the strength and kindness that radiate from him. But do they really know him? Really? They must realise with pain that they admire and love him, yet do not truly know him. The real Jesus remains a secret to them. And it is precisely this elusive, indescribable, ungraspable entity that probably represents the Father. ‘God is love.’ For three years, Jesus showed them the face of God’s love: the love between the Father and the Son that is the source of life. “Whoever has seen me has seen the Father… Do you not believe that I am in the Father and the Father is in me?’ The words I speak to you are, in fact, the words of the Father, who communicates through me, the Word of God. The Father and I are one. “Even if you no longer understand the words, you can still see my deeds. Deeds of love. Believe at least for the sake of the deeds. They are visible, demonstrable, tangible, and communicable.

‘If you truly believe in me, then you will have the same power and strength to do what I have done. ‘ If you believe! I think it’s precisely the lack of faith and trust in Jesus that poses an obstacle on the path to the Father, both for the disciples at that time and for us.

‘Lord, give us more faith! And peace and love…”

Posted in sermons | Leave a comment

St. Catherine of Siena.

Jesus’ invitation! Today, as we celebrate the Feast of St Catherine of Siena, the patron saint of Europe, let us remember Jesus’ invitation to us all: ‘Come to me, all of you, and learn from me.’ This invitation also comes with a promise: ‘I will strengthen you, and you will find rest for your souls.’ We are all called to holiness, but it is those who respond to Jesus’ invitation in their daily lives and through their faithfulness, as St Catherine of Siena did, who become saints. 

Biblical scholars call this fragment of the Gospel a meteor that fell from heaven because it reveals the Sonship of Jesus Christ and His relationship with His Father. The core and essence of the Gospel that John preached is that God is the Father of Jesus, and in Jesus, we are all one. Some even claim that the lightning comes from Him.

Jesus shows us his Father and glorifies him for hiding these things from the wise and intelligent and for revealing them to the humble. This passage is about understanding the mystery of the Kingdom of God, which was revealed to the humble and simple. The Pharisees and scribes lack this understanding because they are convinced of their self-sufficiency and reject Jesus’s teachings.

Do you realize that each Eucharist, daily family prayer, confession, and reception of the Blessed Sacrament is a response to Jesus’s invitation? How would you evaluate your meetings? Are you satisfied with them? Can Jesus, who constantly invites you, always be satisfied with them? Ask yourself and Jesus about those daily meetings now. Perhaps you will also hear Him offer to help you make them more creative and fruitful.

Posted in Nezaradené | Leave a comment

When a shepherd’s work stinks

In today’s Gospel reading, Jesus’ words are neither soft nor vague. He says clearly: ‘I am the gate… I have come so that they may have life.’ He also reveals the cruel truth that we would rather not hear: that there are thieves who come not to serve, but to steal, kill and destroy. The Gospel is not a children’s story about a good shepherd. It is a radical call to distinguish between the voices and actions of others, and to become a shepherd unafraid of dirt, sweat, or the smell of hard work. A good shepherd does not smell of popularity’s perfume. Sometimes, a good shepherd simply smells of sheep; of reality; of the struggle for truth. That is why the sheep recognize him.

The world we live in is both beautiful and complicated. Some people are genuine leaders, while others merely pretend to be. Those in the public sphere, such as politicians, are expected to be the shepherds of society. In the words of Christ, they must enter through the gate of truth and tear down the fences of manipulation rather than climb over them. Their task is not only to govern the state, but also to take responsibility for each individual and their future. It must be said, however, that there are some among them who take their role seriously: they consider the common good, do not forget the weak and seek solutions for everyone, not just their ‘people’ and voters. They embody the spirit of true service. Society needs such leaders.

But we cannot close our eyes to reality. How many times do we see the opposite? When a shepherd’s work stinks, he starts to follow polls instead of conscience. He stops telling the truth because it would cost him votes. Instead of service, cold calculation. Instead of courage, compromise and corruption. Instead of truth, marketing.

This is where courage is needed to name things. The document Dignitas Infinita, issued by Pope Francis, clearly addresses the issues facing today’s world: poverty, war, the arms trade, drugs and organised crime. It also addresses the suffering of migrants, human trafficking, abuse and violence against the defenceless. These are not abstract topics — they are real human suffering that should concern people in the public sphere, and politicians are responsible for addressing them. Directly.

A good shepherd is not a power-hungry manager. They are not technocrats who crunch numbers. Rather, he is the voice of the voiceless: the poor, the unborn, the elderly and the vulnerable. He must have the courage to remind us that a society’s worth is not solely measured by economic growth, but by how it treats the weakest among us and defends human dignity. And that comes at a cost. This reveals who the true shepherd is and who is merely pretending to be one.

The Church is not a safe club for the comfortable. According to God’s plan, it is a place of truth, where people will encounter challenges as well as comfort. The vocation of a priest or bishop is not a function or a career. It is a pastoral vocation, meaning bearing responsibility for souls and the Gospel of Christ. The shepherd should be the voice of the marginalised and vulnerable. The voice of those who are not heard: The voice of the unborn child who cannot defend themselves. The voice of the sick and elderly, whom society perceives as a burden. They should be the voice of victims of abuse, the poor, migrants and the injured; the voice of truth and of crooked laws. 

If a pastor is bored with his job, he will only say what people want to hear. He will select beautiful words from the Gospel about love, acceptance and peace, while disregarding the more challenging and uncomfortable teachings. He will avoid topics such as abortion, euthanasia, abuse, family breakdown, corruption, injustice and the loss of a sense of truth or human dignity. Yet these are precisely the issues that plague today’s world. A pastor who is afraid to address these issues cannot heal them.

The Gospel is clear: life is a gift, and every person has infinite dignity, as ‘Dignitas Infinita’ reminds us. This dignity belongs to everyone: the unborn, the elderly, the healthy, the sick, the strong, the weak, the accepted and the rejected. It is impossible to ‘dilute’ the Gospel into a mere pleasant message about God’s love that will not offend anyone. God’s love is real — and sometimes the truth hurts. . This dignity belongs to everyone – unborn and old, healthy and sick, strong and weak, accepted and rejected. It is not possible to “dilute” the Gospel into just a nice and sweet message about God’s love that will not offend anyone. God’s love is true – and the truth sometimes hurts. 

It also means addressing the issues that trouble society as a whole, even if this provokes resistance, misunderstanding or criticism. A shepherd who remains silent out of fear ceases to be a shepherd. However, it must never be about shouting for effect, harshness without love or condemnation. It is about truth connected to love. A truth that may hurt, but only to heal.

Actors, influencers and artists are also shepherds. They have a huge impact, too. Their words, attitudes, humour and values shape the thinking of generations.
Actors, influencers and artists are also shepherds. They also have a huge impact. Their words, attitudes, humour and values shape the thinking of generations. Young people often listen to them more than they do to their parents or teachers. That’s why popularity, money and fame aren’t the only things that matter – responsibility is important too.

When a shepherd’s job becomes difficult, he starts seeking popularity. He starts saying what ‘works’. He promotes anything that sells, even if it destroys a person, and anyone who pays him. He relativises the truth and gradually becomes just another influential businessman.

We need pastors who are not afraid to say that just because something is legal, it doesn’t mean it’s good. Not everything that is modern is true. Not everything that is popular leads to life. We need people who are truly ‘in’ — not for the paycheque or for algorithms, but for the truth about humanity and God’s plan. The document Dignitas Infinita warns against digital violence and ideologies that break down a person’s identity. Publicly known personalities have enormous power in this area – they can either deepen or heal wounds. A good pastor does not seek applause. He seeks the truth. He has the courage to live by it publicly.
The first shepherds are spouses and parents. They perhaps have it the hardest because their love is tested daily by the realities of life: fatigue, worries, conflicts and decisions that no one else will make for them. When a shepherd grows weary of working within the family unit, he begins to resign. He does not want conflict; he does not want to be “the bad guy”. He gives in to maintain peace, but this comes at the cost of boundaries, truth and support. Love is not just tenderness. Love is also demanding. It’s not just about saying yes or no; it’s also about providing explanations, guidance, prohibitions, protection and setting an example.

We need pastors who are not afraid to say: not everything that is legal is good. 

And there is another part that is more important than education – the relationship between husband and wife is the first place where children learn what love, fidelity, forgiveness, sacrifice mean. Marital love is the first image of a shepherd. Because a shepherd is not someone who commands, but someone who gives himself. Someone who serves. Someone who carries the other. And if the husband can take care of his wife, the wife can take care of her husband – if they carry each other in love even in difficulties – then an environment grows in which they can also take care of the children. Not with perfection, but with fidelity.

The family is the place where children learn to distinguish the voice of the shepherd from the voice of the thief. They learn what is true, what is good, what has value. And if they don’t learn this at home – where will they learn it? In a world that screams, entices and lies? Therefore, being a parent means having the courage to love fully. Not only tenderly, but also truly. Not only comfortably, but also sacrificially. Because it is this kind of love that leads to life.

Universities and schools are places where truth is sought. They are not production lines for diplomas. Teachers and professors are shepherds of the mind; they shape not only knowledge, but also character, direction and the ability to see things as they truly are. When a teacher is tired of their work, they adapt to the pressure of the times so as to avoid problems. They avoid unpleasant questions in case they provoke conflict. If he still teaches, he teaches what is safe, not what is true. Here, the true mission of a teacher or professor is revealed: a deep, personal interest in the subject and the truth. This requires commitment, preparation and honesty. It requires patience, even if the results are not immediately visible. A true teacher knows that their work is like sowing seeds. He does not see the results straight away. Sometimes he does not even know if he has made an impact on his students, yet he continues to work nonetheless.

The world does not need resigned teachers who “unlearn their lessons” and leave. It needs people of interest, effort, and determination. Those who believe that truth has meaning, that shaping a young person is more than just passing on information. Even though this work sometimes “stinks” – it is demanding, invisible, unappreciated. It has a huge meaning – it shapes people who will one day shape the world.

Jesus says, ‘I have come so that they may have life, and have it abundantly.’ Not for glory, comfort, power or recognition. He came so that man could recognise the fullness of life and enter into it, because it originates in God and transcends the visible world. The abundance he speaks of is not an excess of material possessions, but participation in the very life of God. Even on earth. However, the fullness of life is not limited to one, two or three areas of human life and society, but encompasses the entire spectrum of justice based on God. This is precisely why it makes sense to be a shepherd..

Posted in Nezaradené | 1 Comment

St.Louis Grignion de Montfort Mt 28, 16-20

CURRICULUM VITAE

He was born in Montfort, a village in Brittany. He became a priest in Paris. He taught people about the path to holiness and to Jesus through Mary. Pope Clement XI appointed him as the Apostolic Missionary of France. He played a key role in establishing the Congregation of the Daughters of Wisdom and founded a male religious community that would later become known as the Montfort Society of Mary. Following a demanding ministry, he passed away at the age of 43.

His Marian writings contain prophecies about the end times of the Church.

CV FOR MEDITATION

ANNOUNCER OF THE SAFE PATH TO JESUS

He was born on January 31, 1673, in western France, where he was baptized in Montfort, 20 km east of Rennes. His father was a notary, temperamental and violent. After about two years, their family moved a few kilometers away to their farm, Bois-Marquer, belonging to the municipality of Iffendic. Louis was the second of 18 siblings, eight of whom died early.

From the age of 11, Louis was at the Jesuit college of St. Thomas Becket in Rennes, where 2,000 young men studied. There, he became friends with Claude Poullart, later founder of the Fathers of the Holy Spirit, and with Jean Baptiste Blain. In Rennes, Louis also had an uncle who was a priest, and he became his confidant. The Grignion family also moved to Rennes two years later.

Louis was intelligent, diligent, artistic, somewhat shy, and deeply religious. That was how his professors saw him. While praying in the church of Our Lady of Mount Carmel, he decided to become a priest. After eight years of study in Rennes, another eight years of theology awaited him in Paris.

He said goodbye to his family and saw the crossing of the Cesson bridge as a symbolic entry into a new life, which he wanted to live in complete dependence on God’s Providence. He expressed his conviction of a loving Father by giving his luggage to the first beggar, all his money to people experiencing poverty, and reportedly exchanging clothes with another beggar. These were his first joyful steps in a consistent life according to the Gospel. He experienced happiness in trusting in God’s Providence and begged for food and shelter along the way. He felt his freedom in complete surrender to God’s Love, Eternal and Incarnate Wisdom, Jesus Christ.

In Paris, he was housed with poor seminarians and attended lectures. He only entered the St. Sulpice Seminary after two years. The professors there recognized his talents and good qualities. His “weakness” was his love for people of low income and his desire to serve those on the fringes of society. He identified with the most neglected. He worked as a librarian at St. Sulpice and was an avid reader of books on Marian devotion. He greatly broadened his horizons by studying the spiritual writings of important figures, including the Church Fathers. He knew the Bible very well and used it a lot. He longed to be a missionary to the poor, whether in France or abroad. He decided to proclaim the good news of God’s love to the outcasts of human society, that Jesus loves them, and that Mary’s maternal care. His desire was for Jesus and his Mother to be loved by as many people as possible.

At the age of 27, he celebrated his primogeniture in the church of St. Sulpice on June 5, 1700. His further priestly ministry, like his studies, lasted only 16 years. He initially worked among missionary groups and served in the almshouse in Poitiers and in the General Hospital in Paris.

He wondered whether God was calling him to a mission elsewhere, and in 1706, he went to seek advice from Pope Clement XI. Noting the extraordinary gifts God had given Louis, the Pope rejected his offer of a distant mission. Instead, he appointed him an apostolic missionary and sent him back to his homeland, then overrun by Jansenism, to restore the Church there.

Louis de Montfort returned on foot to Poitiers and, in the power of the Spirit, preached the Gospel and taught about the baptismal consecration of the Eternal and Incarnate Wisdom, Jesus Christ, Son of the Virgin Mary. In Poitiers, he also began to found, with Marie Louise Trichet, the female religious congregation of the Daughters of Wisdom. He made the blind woman superior.

Although influenced by the Jesuits and the Sulpicians, he entered the Third Order of St. Dominic in 1710. He organized two hundred missions and retreats in the western region of France. Some admired him, others rejected him. His lifestyle was considered undignified. He carried a Bible, a breviary, and notebooks in a bag over his shoulder. In some dioceses, the episcopal consistories did not even allow him to preach. When it was said that Louis de Montfort had many enemies, he replied that he knew no one but those who flattered him and spoke well of him, and that his best friends were those who caused him great crosses. It was probably not an isolated incident that he gently picked up a dying, dirty, sick beggar on the street, as in Dinan, and carried him to the nearest religious house, calling to the doorman: “Open to Jesus Christ!”

His sermons were filled with his own experiences of God’s love and Mary’s maternal care, and they brought thousands of souls to faith. He recommended daily Holy Communion and Marian devotion. He taught the path he himself had taken: “Through Mary to Jesus”. He taught that the more our soul is devoted to Mary, the more it also surrenders itself to Jesus Christ. He pointed out that in such a form of piety, one can see the perfect renewal of baptismal promises and commitments. In it, the believer surrenders himself to the Virgin Mary, so that through her he may belong completely to Christ. To the Virgin Mary because she was the most suitable way that Jesus himself chose to unite himself to us, and for him to receive us into himself. And Jesus is our goal. Through him and with the cooperation of the Holy Spirit, who is called the Spouse of Mary, we encounter the Father. Mary thus introduces us to the Trinitarian mystery. As the Holy Father John Paul II, who belonged entirely to Mary, said: “No intervention of Mary in the renewal of Christians takes place in competition with Christ, but comes from him and is at his service. I understood that I could not exclude the Mother of the Lord from my life without disregarding the will of the Triune God. The entire Christocentric and Marian spirituality taught by L. Montfort comes from the Trinity and is directed towards it.”

With this teaching, Louis de Montfort successfully fought against Jansenism, which even the higher clergy had absorbed. His successes unleashed a storm of hell against him, and he overcame all adversities with patience, meekness, and humility, unafraid of public opinion. During the mission at Pontchateau, with the help of thousands of people, he built a hill and erected a Calvary on it to make it a place of pilgrimage. Before it was consecrated, the bishop ordered it to be demolished. Louis de Montfort replied to the thousands awaiting the consecration of Calvary: “We hoped to have a Calvary here, but let us build it in our hearts! There the Cross of Christ will stand better than in any other place.”

In 1713, he founded a second congregation, the “Missionaries of the Society of Mary”, a priestly society known as the Montfort Missionaries, which, after his death, became the “Montfort Society of Mary” (SMM). This society spread throughout the world. In 1715, he founded the “Teaching Order of the Brothers of St. Gabriel” to teach catechism to people with low incomes. Some mention is made of the care of the sick.

Posted in Nezaradené | 1 Comment

St.Petrus Kanisius Joh 10,1-10

CURRICULUM VITAE

He came from the Dutch city of Nijmegen. He studied at the University of Cologne and, on May 15, 1543, entered the Jesuit order in Mainz. In 1546, he became a priest. He participated in the Council of Trent, worked in Messina, Sicily; took his vows in 1549, and obtained a doctorate in theology and was then sent to Germany, where for thirty years he worked to revive and strengthen the Catholic faith in the face of Protestantism. In 1556, he became provincial of the Jesuits and brought the brothers of the order to Prague. In addition to Germany and our homeland, he also worked in Austria and Switzerland, where he died at the age of 76.

CV FOR MEDITATION

IN PEACE, LOVE, AND PERSEVERANCE

He was born on May 8, 1521, in Nijmegen in the Duchy of Geldern (in present-day Holland), then part of the Holy Roman Empire of the German nation. His father was the local mayor. He lost his mother early on, and his father devotionremarried. He then had 8 more children, among them Theodoric, who later followed Peter into the order.

Peter is said to have longed for the priesthood since childhood, although his father’s plans were different. While studying at the University of Cologne, he visited the monks of the Charterhouse of St. Barbara and other religious men who combined Dutch humanism with German mysticism and devoted themselves to a spirituality called devotio moderna – modern piety, which was about spiritual renewal.

In 1540, Peter obtained the title of Master of Liberal Arts and then, while studying theology, he also devoted himself to scientific work, from which he published two volumes concerning the church fathers Cyril of Alexandria and Leo the Great. At that time, he met Peter Favre (d. 1 August) and held 30-day retreats under his devotion, and on 8 May 1543, he entered the Society of Jesus in Mainz.

When Archbishop Hermann began to lean towards Protestantism in Cologne, he became the spokesman for those who wanted to remain faithful to the church, and in 1545, he met Emperor Charles V three times and spoke to him about the seriousness of the situation.

He was ordained a priest on June 12, 1546, and by 1562 he had become known as a preacher in Germany, Switzerland, Austria, and Bohemia.

From February to June 1547, as theologian to the Bishop of Augsburg, Cardinal Otto Truchsess, he attended the Council of Trent, where he collaborated with Diego Lainez and Alfonso Salmerón. The cardinal selected him at the Diet of Worms, where they both met with Emperor Charles V.

Peter Canisius was then called to Rome by the founder of the order, Ignatius of Loyola (b. 31 July). There he completed his formation and in the spring of 1548 was sent to the seminarians in Messina, Sicily, to teach them rhetoric, Latin and Italian. From Messina he was recalled to Rome, where on 7 September 1549 he took solemn religious vows and received a blessing from Pope Paul III. Then on 4 October he received a doctorate in theology in Bologna and was sent to Germany, where he worked for thirty years to revive and restore the Catholic faith.

Canisius’ spirituality recalls his ascetic life and loving devotion not only to Jesus, with whom he experienced a deep personal friendship, but also to the Virgin Mary, with whose help he carried out his apostolic mission. At the very beginning of his life, already in Rome on September 4, three days before his vows, he had, according to his spiritual diary, a vision of the Divine Heart. He wrote: “Then it was as if your most sacred body opened its heart to me – it seemed to me that I was looking directly into it – and you commanded me to drink from this spring, because you, my Savior, never cease to invite me to draw from your springs the water of my salvation.” He also recounts a vision in which the Savior gave him a garment sewn from three parts, which are peace, love and perseverance—the virtues necessary for the apostolate that Peter was sent to carry out in Germany.

His activity in German territory began in the Duchy of Bavaria. In 1556 he was appointed provincial of the order, under whose jurisdiction Austria, Bohemia, Poland, and Switzerland also belonged. He founded Jesuit colleges that helped implement reforms according to the Council of Trent. He opened the Clementinum in Prague and brought 12 Jesuits to an abandoned monastery. Protestants showed their hatred towards him by throwing stones at his services and calling him a “dog”, after Kanijs (from the Latin “canisius”).

His successful work did the most to preserve Catholicism in southern Germany, and his most widely distributed work was the three Catechisms, which he wrote around 1556-57. In the first, he explained basic theological concepts to students, in the second, he presented the basics of religious education for young people, and in the third, he wrote for high school and university students. He used the question-and-answer format briefly and very clearly. With the Catechism, which was published 200 times during his lifetime and was published until the end of the 20th century, he shaped the faith of the people.

He also prepared the publication of prayer books in various languages, texts of homilies and biographies of Swiss saints. In Worms in 1557, he participated in discussions with Protestant representatives. He always faithfully adhered to every dogmatic truth and at the same time showed respect for every person. As he sent a message to Rome, he recognized that the majority of Germans had converted to Protestantism through no fault of their own and distinguished between conscious apostasy from the faith and its innocent loss. He wrote three volumes to refute Protestantism: On the Incarnate Word, On the Virgin Mary, and On the Papacy.

He was offered the rank of Bishop of Vienna three times and always refused it. In 1558 he served as papal nuncio to Poland. The following year, in 1565, he attended two provincial assemblies in Augsburg. At the final session of the Council of Trent in 1562, he spoke on the question of communion under both kinds and on the Index of Forbidden Books.

From 1580, he preached and wrote in Freiburg, Switzerland, where he also died at the age of 76.

He was beatified in 1864 by Pius IX and declared the second apostle of Germany by Pope Leo XIII in 1897. In 1925, Pope Pius XI canonized him and declared him a Doctor of the Church.

RESOLUTION, PRAYER

It is easy to make a long-term resolution, but difficult to persevere in it. For our relationship with all others to whom we are to communicate the faith, it is necessary to be full of peace, love, and perseverance. To clothe ourselves with these virtues means to become accustomed to and to come closer to the image of Christ, the second apostle of Germany.

O God, who strengthened Saint Peter Canisius to defend the Catholic faith with love and wisdom, through his intercession, grant to those who seek you the joy of finding you and to those who believe in you perseverance in faith. We ask this through your Son Jesus Christ our Lord, who lives and reigns with you in the unity of the Holy Spirit, world without end. Amen.

Posted in Nezaradené | 1 Comment

St. Mark’s Basilica in Italy

Posted in Nezaradené | 2 Comments

A Gospel rich in detail

 

Saint Mark was a close collaborator of Saint Peter in Rome. In fact, he helped Peter so much that, in one of his letters, the Apostle refers to Mark as his son (cf. 1 Pet 5:13). Mark accompanied Peter on his preaching tours and, at the request of the Romans, wrote his Gospel based on Peter’s sermons. Peter himself, upon hearing it, authorized it to be read in the church.

In his Gospel, Mark omits some of Jesus’s great sayings. Instead, he vividly describes the moments he spent with the disciples. He pauses to describe the atmosphere of the places they visit, contemplates the Lord’s gestures and recounts the Apostles’ spontaneous reactions. In short, he enables us to appreciate the charm of Christ’s character, which attracted the Twelve and the first Christians.

During the early years of his priestly ministry, Saint Josemaría gave away copies of the Gospel as gifts. He explained that, like Saint Mark, we need to keep the life of Jesus “in our heads and hearts, so that at any moment, even without a book and with our eyes closed, we can contemplate his life as if in a film”. The first Gospel is written with such detail that it is easy for us to enter into Jesus’ earthly journey. With the help of our imagination, we can relive some of the scenes from his life and gradually develop the same feelings and thoughts as Christ (cf. Phil 2:5).

Mark, Paul’s friend… 

Before he lived in Rome, Saint Mark was one of the earliest Christians in Jerusalem. He was the cousin of Barnabas, who invited him to preach the Gospel. They both set out with Paul on his first apostolic journey (cf. Acts 13:5–13), but not everything went as they had hoped. Upon arriving in Cyprus, Mark realised that he could not continue and returned to Jerusalem. This must have caused Paul to feel resentful; when they planned a second journey and Barnabas wanted Mark to accompany them again, Paul objected. The group therefore split up, with Paul and Barnabas going their separate ways.

Years later, when Mark found himself in Rome, he met Paul again, and we see them collaborating in the proclamation of the Gospel. realizedn. When he had to leave, Paul wrote to Timothy: ‘Take Mark with you, for he is useful to me in the ministry’ (2 Timothy 4:11). The problems they had experienced in Cyprus were forgotten. Paul and Mark were friends, working together on the most important thing: spreading the good news about Christ.

In our daily lives, it is normal to have certain conflicts with those around us, as Paul did with Mark and with his companions in bringing Christ to people. These conflicts may arise due to different approaches to a problem, certain difficult-to-understand character traits, or many other reasons. Fatigue itself can accentuate these frictions. However, what matters is not these differences, which will always exist, but our ability to recognize this diversity as a source of richness. In this way, we can value the people around us like Paul did, recognizing that what unites us is greater than what divides us. As Saint Josemaría said: ‘You must also constantly practice the fraternity that is above all natural sympathies or antipathies, loving one another as true brothers and sisters, with the care and understanding that are characteristic of those who form a well-united family.’

Leaving the safety of the shore…

Saint Mark concludes his narrative with Jesus’ call to the apostles to spread his word: ‘Go into all the world and preach the gospel to every creature’ (Mark 16:15). Not only did the evangelist accept this command, he also tried to put it into practice. recognizinget off on other adventures, leaving his homeland behind.

‘Life is strengthened by giving and weakened by isolation and comfort.’ Indeed, it is those who make the most of life’s possibilities who leave a certain shore and allow themselves to be inspired by the mission of communicating life to others”.⁴ Saint Mark had the same experience. Initially, he felt disoriented, moving away from the peace and reality he knew, but he was ultimately able to venture beyond the safety of the shore and share the joy of life with Jesus throughout the world. Through his gospel, he also helped later generations of Christians to know the Lord more closely.

Posted in Nezaradené | Leave a comment

St.Fidelis of Sigmaringen

April 24 reminder
Position: religious priest and martyr OFMCap
Death: 1622
Patron: lawyers, assistants, in judicial matters and in spreading the faith
Attributes: Capuchin, club or mace and sword

CURRICULUM VITAE

He came from Sigmaringen in Swabia, which is now part of Germany. Studying law in Freiburg under the name Marek Roy, he then practiced law. In 1612, he became a priest and took the name Fidel when he joined the Capuchin order. Representing the newly formed Congregation for the Propagation of the Faith, he combatted the heresies spreading in southern Germany and Switzerland. He was eventually arrested and murdered by heretics because he refused to renounce the Catholic faith.

THE LOYALTY OF THE ADVOCATE OF THE POOR

He was born in early October 1578 in Sigmaringen on the Danube in southwest Germany. He was given the Christian name Mark. He had four siblings. His father, Jan Roy, was a mayor and judge, but apparently died when Marek was still young. His mother’s name was Jenovéfa, and she is said to have cared for the orphans with a guardian.

Mark, as the most gifted, was sent to Freiburg, where in 1601 he obtained a doctorate in philosophy. He then continued his studies of civil and ecclesiastical law, which he interrupted in 1604 and traveled with young German nobles through France, Spain, and Italy as their leader until about 1610. After returning, he completed his studies with a doctorate on May 16, 1611, and then served as a lawyer and court councilor in Ensisheimcombatedlsace. Unlike his colleagues, he uncompromisingly defended the rights of those who needed it, he stood up for the poor in the first place and was therefore called the lawyer of the poor. Once his fellow lawyer said to him, “Doctor, I beg you not to be too fair. Just deviate a little from your principles, and you will make a great profit from it.” Perhaps this was the last straw that caused a change of profession—embarking on a spiritual path.

He decided to enter the Capuchin order, but first, in the quadrant, he longed for priestly ordination. He had completed some of his studies earlier, completed the rest, and became a priest at the end of September 1612. A few days later, on October 4, he entered the Capuchin novitiate in Freiburg, Germany. There, with the religious habit, he also received the new name Fidel (Latin Fidelis), expressing fidelity to the faith, and on that occasion the quadrian reminded him of the words from the Book of Revelation: “Be faithful until death, and I will bestow upon you the crown of life” (Rev. 2:10). And those words became his motto.

After the novitiate, which ended in 1613, he received further theological education in Constance and Frauenfeld. In 1617, he preached in Altsdorf and then for about five years held the position of quadrian, superior in several Capuchin monasteries. He also raised the moral level of the faithful with his sermons. He was a sought-after confessor, counselor, and if necessary, even in his habit, he went to court to help the poor enforce their rights. He himself led a very simple life with frequent fasts and other self-denials. He lived faithfully to the Virgin Mary, because walking with her meant for him also the path of faithfulness to Christ, to whom she directs everyone. Spirituality on his spiritual life were published in print under the title Spiritual Exercises (Exercitia spirituality). In later editions, the title was changed to spirituality of Seraphim Piety.

In addition to Alsace, Fidel also worked in Switzerland and Vorarlberg. From the end of 1621 on, he worked in the Rhaetian mission, whose task was to prevent the spread of Calvinism and strengthen the Catholic faith in eastern Switzerland. The Roman commission (later congregation) for the propagation of the faith appointed him superior of the mission on 19 April 1622. However, this appointment was towards the end of his life. He signed his text as Brother Fidelis, soon to be buried.

His last assignment was in Seewies at a time when religious hostility, especially among the Calvinists, fueled by political disputes, often led to bloody riots. Fidelis was therefore offered an armed escort for his missionary journey to Seewies, which he refused. His brother John then asked him what they would do if they were attacked. He replied, “What else but martyrs of God? We would gladly undergo death for God.” In his sermon, he then emphasized and explained the words: “One God, one faith, one baptism.” At that, one of the Calvinists began to shoot at him. Fidelis was not hit and quickly went outside because he did not want the murderer to desecrate the church. He walked towards the neighboring village but was stopped by the Calvinists, who wanted him to convert to their faith. He replied to them, “Dear brothers, I have not come to you to accept a distorted faith but to preach to you the true faith.” After these words, they attacked him with swords and a spiked club and murdered him.

He became the first martyr of the Congregation for the Propagation of the Faith. He was declared a saint by Benedict XIV in 1746.

Posted in Nezaradené | Leave a comment

Fourth Sunday of Easter, Year A: John 10.1-10

Asking for the gift of gratitude, love, ideals, and humility…
The fourth Sunday of Easter is traditionally called ‘Good Shepherd Sunday,’ so it is not surprising that the word ‘shepherd’ appears several times in biblical texts (in all cycles). So, let’s start by trying to understand who the Shepherd actually is, what his role is, and why he is important. After all, how many people in our society today are familiar with the hard work involved in being a shepherd? Our image is perhaps too idealized: a pipe, a blue sky, rolling grass, birds singing overhead, and sheep bells jingling.

In ancient times, particularly in the Near East, being a shepherd was a serious profession. It was a poor person’s profession; the sheep did not belong to them, yet they were responsible for them. They had to locate pastures, which was not easy in a dry, arid environment. Moreover, they had to move from winter to summer pastures twice a year, sometimes traveling hundreds of kilometers. They also often had to fight other shepherds for access to pastures and springs. During the day, the shepherd guarded the flock so that none of the sheep ran away and at night to prevent theft or attacks by wild animals. They were always awake and alert, providing the sheep with safety, protection, pastures and water, just as the psalmist sings in today’s Psalm 23. They also had to provide direction and constantly count the flock, calling to them — the sheep remember the voice of their shepherd well. The sheep depend on the shepherd for everything; they must trust him, and he must deserve their trust. If we transfer this image of the shepherd to Jesus, then only He can truly say: ‘I am the good shepherd; I know my sheep, and my sheep know my voice’. No one has ever cared more about us, the sheep of his flock, than he has. Being a sheep of Christ is not a degradation but a privilege: belonging to Christ. To have the Son of God as my shepherd, who knows me personally and knows my needs, my joys, my worries and even my sins, yet still loves me, and calls me by name! Knowing someone’s name is always an expression of a personal relationship, especially in the mentality of biblical people. He knows my name and knows me above all. As a good shepherd, he feels responsible for me, he loves me and he cares for me!

As I mentioned at the beginning, today is known as ‘Good Shepherd Sunday.’ Whenever we read the Gospel of John, Christ says of himself: ‘I am the good shepherd!’

In Biblical Hebrew, the verb ‘to be’ does not have the same tense as in English. This is reserved exclusively for God, who alone speaks about himself: ‘I am who I am!’ (Written in Hebrew script, which has no vowels, as YHVH.) This word, Yahweh or Jehovah (with vowels added depending on whether those from the names ADONAI or ELOHIM are used), is applied by Jesus Christ, the Son of God, to himself. This use of God’s name outraged the Sanhedrin, priests and Pharisees, who considered it blasphemous. From their perspective, it was blasphemy that deserved the death penalty.

Although we did not explicitly hear the aforementioned ‘I am the good shepherd,’ we initially heard rather unflattering things: ‘I am the door.’ However, these are not ordinary doors. Here, it is the entrance to the sheepfold, and only the shepherd is permitted to enter through it. If someone else enters the sheepfold—this place of safety—they do not enter as a shepherd but as a thief. The Pharisees and high priests treated the prophets, as well as Christians, as usurpers who broke into the souls of God’s people. Because they imposed only one interpretation of God’s law and one view of God, Christ calls them “thieves and robbers.” Jesus is the only just and good shepherd because he gives his followers freedom: ‘I am the door.’ Whoever enters through me will be saved. They will be able to come in and go out, and find pasture’ (an expression of freedom). ‘I have come that they may have life, and have it abundantly. ‘ The Son of God is the giver of life!)

We also heard the beautiful expression of the good shepherd in Psalm 23. As a priest, I know that most people at Holy Mass do not understand the psalm texts, the singing, or the drone from the pulpit. For many, the psalm merely serves as an addition to the table of God’s word, rendering its meaning elusive. However, I believe you would all be able to recall today’s psalm because the words “The Lord is my shepherd, I shall not want” are probably familiar to us all. This is probably because we have heard it before, either as listeners to Antonín Dvořák’s beautiful Biblical Songs or as attendees of funeral ceremonies, where this psalm is often recited.

So why not enjoy this beautiful psalm as a “dessert” to today’s biblical readings?

‘The Lord is my shepherd; I shall not want.’ And what about us? Do we really lack anything? Each of us could list several things we lack, and sometimes this is noticeable. I don’t know anyone who would answer: ‘I am happy and content; I have everything I need.’ Only the rare ‘simpletons of God’ in the tradition of St Francis and his followers would answer that way. And yet, the answer should actually be self-evident. Why don’t we reflect on our complaints and what we lack? If we are honest with ourselves, we will realise that, except for health — both physical and mental — everything else is important and essential but not actually necessary. How many things and needs can we easily do without? But can we live without love? Or without inner peace, joy, and balance? And, of course, can we live without bread and water?
(Just to emphasize how much happier we would be if we realized what is essential and non-essential in life, and what is necessary and what is not. If only we were aware that our happiness will be fulfilled only if those around us are happy thanks to us… Let us listen once again to the words of the psalmist: ‘The Lord is my shepherd, I shall not want. He makes me lie down in green pastures and leads me beside quiet waters; he restores my soul.” This image represents the satisfaction of all a person’s basic needs: the need for satiety, represented here by the ‘green pastures’. After all, if the Lord is the shepherd, then we are his flock, his beloved and lovingly cared-for sheep. This is not only in terms of physical and biological needs. The Lord is a shepherd who feeds and waters his sheep, gives them rest and security, and protects them. With him, we can rest and he will refresh us. He will restore freshness, strength, joy, and hope, especially to our souls. He does not leave us helpless and groping: ‘He leads us in the right paths,’ and most importantly, he watches over us, providing protection and security.

We could go on with Psalm 23, but you can do that sometimes alone at home, in peace, in contemplation. I will end with the last verse: “Surely goodness and mercy will follow me all the days of my life, and I will dwell in the house of the Lord for ever and ever.” Is there any need to add anything to these words of invitation? Perhaps just a request. To see ourselves through the eyes of Christ, the eyes of the shepherd, and to ask for the gift of gratitude, love, and humility. May the gifts of the Spirit accompany us with Christ “all the days of our life.”

Posted in sermons | Leave a comment