What is the most pressing need within the church?

Greater laypeople’s involvement in governance alone will not suffice; the most significant challenge lies elsewhere.

Greater involvement of laypeople in governance will not be enough, the biggest challenge is something else

During Pope Francis’s visit, young people gathered at the Kosice stadium. 

What we require most in the church: Greater lay involvement in governance will not be enough; the greatest challenge is something else.

Forbidden Evidence of God’s Existence: When a German Jesuit School Won’t Allow a Lecture by a Catholic Theologian

The view of the Vaticanism Leo XIV: Something ends, and something begins

How to find out when one parent is Catholic, the other is Evangelical, and the marriage was only in church.

We live on the threshold of something new. This is not merely the start of a new calendar year.

Today, January 6, the Pope closes the Holy Door of St. Peter’s Basilica, bringing the Jubilee Year of 2025 to an end. It was the year of two popes, but only now is a transitional period between pontificates finally coming to an end. Leo XIV has worn the episcopal coat of arms embroidered on the sash of his white cassock since Christmas Eve, as did Benedict XVI, but Francis has not.

The year 2026 will belong entirely to the new pope; it will be a clean slate in this sense.

At the same time, Francis’ legacy continues as the church enters the final phase of the synod on sodality, the Argentine pope’s most significant project.

The so-called implementation phase of the synod will last the next two years.

However, I fear that most ordinary believers will barely notice this process. Yes, a team has been created at the KBS to encourage bishops to implement the conclusions of the synodal documents adopted at the level of the Holy See and at the two October 2023 and 2024 sessions.

But for most people, these are incomprehensible matters and structures – and above all, their introduction into the life of the church depends on the decision of individual bishops and individual parish administrators.

It will therefore be essential to follow how Leo XIV thinks about sodality and how he understands it. In connection with sodality, he emphasizes not so many structural changes as the establishment of a new mentality: a community that listens to one another, and this mentality should dominate the institutional-hierarchical dimension of the church.

So far, this is the mindset of Francis’ successor.

Leo XIV: Something ends and something begins
The view of the Vaticanism Leo XIV: Something ends, and something begins

We indeed need to have functional economic and pastoral councils at the parish and diocesan levels. It is undoubtedly correct and desirable for laypeople to help where they can, relieving the burden on priests so they can focus on spiritual matters as a priority.

I believe that this issue will, so to speak, resolve itself, as in just a few years we will feel that many. Clerics will find themselves at retirement age.

However, it is already wise for laypeople to help where needed. For example, while the priest can focus on preparing for evening catechesis for adults, the priest can instead focus on the bureaucratically demanding burden of managing the parish registry.

There are, of course, several challenges in the church in Slovakia. We discussed the clergy’s aging, which we must prepare for from many angles. Then there is the issue of financial independence. Some dioceses are already starting to think about this and, following the example of our Evangelical brothers, are considering the future and relying less on the state, which may not always be willing to finance.

Greater lay involvement in the life of the church and in decision-making processes may currently seem like the central challenge we should all be running from.

But is this really so? Aren’t we at risk of overlooking, despite our good intentions, something that could potentially exceed this goal?

I dare to say that the greatest challenge for the church in Slovakia lies elsewhere. Two ideas, or rather observations, originating from entirely different environments, guide me to this conclusion. One observation comes from the USA, while the other originates from our “Easterners.”

A few thoughts after returning from the second session of the Synod
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St.Raymond of Pena fort.

January 7, non-binding commemoration
Position: Lawyer, Dominican priest
Death: 1275
Patron: Teachers of canon law and the city of Barcelona

Attributes:

Sea, Dominican habit, from the cloak a sail

CURRICULUM VITAE

He was born in Spain near Barcelona. He soon became a philosophy teacher. Furthermore, he studied law in Italy and became a public defender for people on low incomes. The bishop of his birthplace persuaded him to return and made him a canon of the Barcelona Cathedral. He was a renowned preacher, confessor, and scholar. At around 46, he entered the Dominican Order. He was the Superior General of the Order from 1238 to 1240. He reorganized the Order’s statutes. At the behest of Pope Gregory IX., he prepared for publication the regulations of church law, which he compiled into a collection called the Decretals. His writings resulted in the “Summa of Cases for the Correct and Useful Administration of the Sacraments of Penance.” In the 1770s, he also founded Hebrew schools. In Catalonia, he then devoted himself to missionary work, established dialogue with Muslims, and lived a pious penitential life for about a hundred years.

CV FOR MEDITATION

ON A COAT OVER THE SEA

His birth name is associated with the castle of his ancestors in Pena fort in Catalonia, the capital of which is Barcelona. There, he successfully studied at the cathedral school, where he also worked as a chorister. At the age of 20, he became a philosophy teacher, and for 9 years, he instilled in his students the principles of true Christian wisdom and was an example of a life of faith. Then, in 1205, he decided to continue his studies in Bononia (today’s Bologna), Italy. After obtaining his doctorate, he lectured on church law as a public teacher. People with low incomes used to have an excellent defender in court.

During his journey from Rome, the Bishop of Barcelona, ​​Berengar, persuaded him to return to his homeland, and after his ordination, made him a canon, later a provost and vicar general. At around 46, he entered the Dominican order, which was only approved in 1216. He stood out as a renowned preacher, confessor, and excellent counselor. As general of the order, he was entrusted, among other things, with writing theological writings. After consultations with Peter Nolasco and King James I of Aragon, who chose him as their confessor, all three, on the advice of the Virgin Mary, decided to ransom Christian prisoners from the captivity of the Muslim Moors. For this purpose, the Order of Mercedarians was founded, whose religious rules were written by Raymond and confirmed by Pope Gregory IX. Peter Nolasco became the first general superior of this merciful order.

Pope Gregory IX summoned Raymond to Rome in 1230 to make him his confessor, advisor, and domestic chaplain. It is known that Gregory IX once received from him a penance to care for people in poverty and to provide them with assistance. This was the moment Raymond saw that a group of poor people had come to the papal palace and received nothing. The pope then diligently ensured that the poor were cared for.

At the behest of the Pope, Raymond compiled the canons of church law into a collection of five volumes known as the Decretals. These became the primary source of legal doctrine and the basis of the code of church law.

Around the beginning of 1235, the Pope offered Raymond the Archbishopric of Tarragona in Spain, but he humbly declined the position, preferring to remain a humble monk. Due to his exhaustion from an active life, doctors advised him to leave Rome. Gregory IX was reluctant to grant him permission. Raymond was joyfully welcomed in his birthplace, where he began working to foster the flourishing of his order. After the tragic death of the order’s general, Jordan of Saxony, he was elected the new general of the Dominican order, the third since its foundation. He reorganized the order’s statutes and demonstrated himself to be an experienced, careful, and kind father when he visited the order’s individual communities. He also published a manual for confessors, “Summa casuum.” After two years, when he was about 70 years old, for health reasons, he resigned the rank he had received out of obedience to continue living as a simple brother, dedicating himself to missionary work for the conversion of Muslims and Jews. Therefore, he established schools in several monasteries where Arabic and Hebrew were taught. From there, capable missionaries emerged.

Raymond was not demonstrating his superiority; rather, his actions were a manifestation of God’s power and an emphasis on the validity of God’s law, which he held dear. It was a sign that it is easier to cross the sea on a mere cloak than to willfully remain in sin while trying to secure one’s salvation.

As the Lord Jesus said to his disciples, “Amen, I say to you, if you have faith as a grain of mustard seed … nothing will be impossible for you.” (Matthew 17:20) We should consider Raymond’s behavior more normal than the king’s. Of course, we should consider the Word of God as the norm for us. For those who think sin is normal in life, the norm is the opposite. It is very dangerous to succumb to illusions that shape the conscience, according to King James’s rules on his way to Mallorca. Not everyone will receive the grace of the experience that Raymond’s actions in this story provoked.

RESOLUTION, PRAYER

For one, the resolution may be a daily prayer of faith to strengthen trust; for another, conversion, beginning with the path of correct formation of conscience. For another person, the resolution may involve rejecting a tendency towards a sinful relationship.

This saint’s example inspires us to resist the influence of worldly opinions and instead seek guidance from the Spirit of God. With his help, Raymond established relationships in all his activities, studied, remained humble, and experienced relationships with the Virgin Mary, the poor, the suffering, and sinners whom he led to conversion.

“Merciful God, you filled Saint Raymond with great love for sinners and captives; through his intercession, free us from the slavery of sin, that we may freely do what pleases you. We ask this through your Son Jesus Christ, our Lord, who lives and reigns with you in the unity of the Holy Spirit, forever and ever.

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The Epiphany of the Lord: Matthew 2,1-12

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John Nepomuk Neumann.

Holiday: January 5th

* March 28, 1811, Prachatice, Czech Republic
† January 5, 1860, Philadelphia, USA

Meaning of the name: modest (lat.)

Jan Nepomuk Neumann

John Nepomuk Neumann

John Nepomuk Neumann was born on March 28, 1811, in Prachatice in the Bohemian Forest. His father, Filip Neumann, came from Obernburg in Bavaria and became a stocking master in Prachatice. He married the daughter of a Prague saddler master: Anežka Lepšá. Ján was their third child, and three more were born after him. On the day of his birth, he was baptized in the church of St. James the Elder and was named after the Czech patron saint, John of Nepomuk.

As he himself mentions in his diary, both of his parents were deeply religious. His mother often took him to church for various devotions; he ministered almost daily. Despite this, he did not initially contemplate the priesthood; it seemed too noble to him. He began to consider it much later. After finishing elementary school in Prachatice, he went to České Budějovice to the Piarist grammar school, where he diligently studied Latin and Greek. However, he also had to take private Czech lessons because German was spoken more at home.

After graduating from high school, he hesitated between medicine in Prague and the seminary in České Budějovice. He was drawn more to medicine because he was genuinely interested in natural sciences, and, in addition, only 20 of almost 100 applicants were accepted to the seminary. However, his mother persuaded him to apply to the seminary anyway. So Ján submitted both applications and, to his surprise, was accepted to the seminary in České Budějovice.

Due to limited circumstances, he had to study externally, but he achieved excellent results. Sometime during his theological studies, he came across letters from the “Annale Leopoldinae,” a magazine about American missions, which shaped his future vocation. He felt very clearly that his Lord was also calling him to missions. After reading the letters of a Yugoslav missionary in North America, he decided that after his ordination, he would go there. To prepare himself linguistically, he moved to Prague, but strangely enough, he could not find an English teacher there either. He did not give up and began learning English and Spanish privately from factory workers.

After completing his theology studies, however, he faced another obstacle, almost unimaginable from today’s perspective: he was refused ordination due to the surplus of priests. Since there was no longer any place to place priests, the bishop was allowed to ordain only those theologians who had been promised a position as private chaplains in a noble family. However, Ján did not have any such protection. In his need, he turned to his friend, the priest of Budějovice, Fr. Dichtl. Through an acquaintance from the Strasbourg seminary, he contacted the ordinary in Philadelphia, Bishop Francis Kenrick, who was still laboriously seeking a priest to work with emigrants in North America. However, as a condition for paying for the trip, he demanded that the candidate have a recommendation from his bishop, which Ján did not have either. Finally, a hopeful path opened up: Bishop Jean Dubois of New York wrote a letter requesting that priests be sent to work with the growing minority of German immigrants.

Finally! John left Prachatice on February 8, 1836, deliberately without saying goodbye. In Budějovice, he sent his parents a note explaining that he did not want to bother them unnecessarily. Let it be their consolation that he was going where the Lord was sending him. He completed a rather exhausting journey by ship across the ocean and landed in New York at the beginning of June, ragged and penniless. Still, with determination, he went from American diocese to diocese, asking for a missionary position. “I will ask for permission to work for the souls who are most abandoned, whether they are Germans or Indians. And if no one accepts me, I will withdraw into solitude, where I will repent for my sins and the sins of others.”

But he did not have to search long. He soon found St. Patrick’s Cathedral, where Bishop Jean Dubois warmly welcomed him. John had imagined he would spend several months preparing for his future work and for receiving the sacrament of the priesthood, but the bishop misled him—there was no time for long preparations. In the same month, on June 25, 1836, John of Nepomuk was ordained a priest at the age of twenty-five. He was immediately assigned to work in a vast area around Buffalo, near Niagara Falls. On his way to his new place of work, the young novice priest stopped in the town of Rochester, where he met Father Prost, the superior of the American Redemptorists (Congregation of the Most Holy Redeemer). A deep friendship developed between them.

He courageously took on his first parish. In June, he celebrated the first mass in the village of Williamsville, in a church without a roof and windows. He himself came from rough circumstances, but the harsh living conditions of his parishioners deeply affected him. In those days, there were many scattered emigrant settlements, consisting mainly of German families, but also of French, Irish, and Czech families. Dense forests, swamps, and rivers separated the individual settlements, and there were no proper roads. He served spiritually and took care of the immigrants’ practical needs. He thought a lot about children and their education, founding and helping to build schools, first in Williamsville and Lancaster and later in the North Bush settlement, where he moved in 1838. There, he also first met and befriended the Indians, calling them “the poor children of nature.”

During his constant, arduous, and lonely journey from one settlement to another, he felt an ever-increasing need for a support system, a kind of spiritual family. The community-based work of the Redemptorist missionaries attracted him. Finally, in 1840, he wrote a letter to Father Prost, in which he confided his secret desire to join the Redemptorists. He was accepted with pleasure. He entered the novitiate in Pittsburgh and completed it in Baltimore at the monastery of St. James, where he also took his vows on January 16, 1842. Together with him, his brother Václav, who had come from Bohemia to help him, entered the congregation as a lay brother.

In Baltimore, John participated in the parish’s pastoral care and also helped organize the construction of the new basilica of St. Alphonsus Liguori, the founder of the Redemptorist congregation. After only two years, however, he was elected superior of the religious house in Pittsburgh, and from 1847 to 1849, he led the entire American Redemptorist mission. But his mission in America did not end there. Divine Providence had an even more challenging task in store for him.

In 1851, he returned to Baltimore as the superior of the monastery of St. James. In addition to administering the parish, he devoted himself to writing and publishing the “Katholische Kirchenzeitung”. He also took care of the nuns, whom he himself invited to lead new elementary schools, orphanages, and hospitals. At that time, he was caught by the unexpected election of the new bishop of Philadelphia – he was to become it himself! John did not want this, and, to tell the truth, even the Catholics of Philadelphia were not enthusiastic: John of Nepomuk seemed to them not very representative for such an office. He was of short stature – he measured only 160 cm. He did not suffer from dressing; moreover, he was a foreigner and spoke English with a strange accent. Archbishop Kenrick, however, insisted on his election.

John of Nepomuk was ordained a bishop on March 28, 1852, coincidentally on his 41st birthday. This happened in the Baltimore Basilica of St. Alphonsus, in the construction of which he himself had participated years earlier. He chose the words of the well-known prayer as his motto: “Sufferings of Christ, strengthen me!” Even in his new office, he devoted himself primarily to ordinary people, tirelessly visiting all the parishes entrusted to him. During each visitation, he organized spiritual renewal, but he also founded hospitals, orphanages, and schools, and invited new religious communities to the diocese to take care of these institutions. He built 80 churches and more than 100 parish schools. He is therefore rightly considered the founder of American Catholic education. He also made outstanding efforts to mitigate manifestations of racism. He advocated elevating liturgical celebration and reformed the local seminary. For the needs of his pastoral ministry, he himself wrote the Small and Large Catholic Catechisms, which later saw twenty-one editions. Wherever he went, he strove to renew spiritual life and to restore unity with the Bishop of Rome.

In the autumn of 1854, he traveled to Rome to personally participate in the solemn declaration of the dogma of the Immaculate Conception of the Virgin Mary. Until the very day of the declaration (December 8), he lived as a regular Redemptorist in a Roman monastery, visiting pilgrimage sites in the area on foot and performing works of penance. He also met Pope Pius IX at a personal audience. After the declaration, he set off on his first visit to Bohemia in the 19th century! First, at the end of December, he visited his sister Jana in Prague, the superior of the Borromean monastery. He intended to arrive in Prachatice in secret, but people heard about his arrival, and his sleigh was greeted from afar by the ringing of bells, gunfire, and music. Everyone gathered in the streets, kneeling to receive the famous native’s blessing. In his home, his father welcomed him and hugged him; his mother was no longer alive at that time. He stayed in Prachatice for only a few days in February 1855. At the end of March, he resumed all his duties in Philadelphia.

His life’s journey ended very suddenly – on January 5, 1860, when he was returning from the post office, at the age of 49. It was a cardiac arrest. Archbishop Kenrick said of his death, “He could not die otherwise than on the road. He was always in motion. Every hour, every moment of his life, his soul was directed towards the Lord God.” He was buried in the Redemptorist Church of St. Peter in Philadelphia.

The beatification process began in 1897, and on October 13, 1963, it was declared part of the Second Vatican Council. Pope Paul VI solemnly canonized him on January 19, 1977. Commemorators consider it a miracle that some priests and religious figures from Bohemia were able to attend his canonization in Rome, given that the communists ruled Bohemia and it was the year of Charter 77.

Prachatice native Ján Nepomuk Neumann paradoxically became the first American saint. He not only preached unity, but also acted as if he himself embodied a bridge between different worlds: the son of a German and a Czech woman served several white nations, Indians, and blacks in America. May he obtain for us such a broad and open heart, which we so need in this time of merging cultures and worlds, but also a truly missionary spirit, the Spirit of Christ.

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Second Sunday after Christmas A John 1,1-18

Regular churchgoers may have noticed that today’s Gospel has been heard three times recently. The first time they listened to the Gospel was during Christmas, followed by New Year’s Eve, and today. The Church has us read this Gospel three times in a row because it contains a wonderful truth about the Word of God, essential to our lives. Let us try to reflect together on this truth of our faith. We know from experience that every word we utter as humans originates in our thoughts. That is why we say that our words are born from our thoughts. And with this statement, let us turn to our heavenly Father. God is eternal. He exists from eternity. And from eternity He thinks about Himself. When He feels about Himself, He imagines Himself. His idea of ​​himself is perfect. It is so perfect that it is alive and breathing. He is the second Divine Person, the Son of God. This second Divine Person is called the Word with a capital S by the Evangelist John to indicate that just as the human word is born from human thought, so the Son of God is born from the thought of God the Father.

And now we can go one step further in silent reflection. In today’s Gospel, the Evangelist John writes that the Word became flesh and dwelt among us. This means that the Son of God became a man to dwell among us. And this is the most essential truth of today’s Gospel for our lives. Therefore, it is right when we ask, “Why did the Son of God become man?” John answers us with these words: “God so loved the world that he gave his only-begotten Son, that whoever believes in him should not perish but have eternal life (John 3:16). This means that the Son of God became man so that we could become children of God, happy here on earth and blessed in eternity. But this wonderful truth must not remain just information for us, as when someone tells us how people spend their vacations in Mallorca, Spain. This information may be intriguing, but its content is distant and unreal to us. But let us imagine that we actually managed to get to Mallorca and spend our vacation on a beautiful, sunny beach. That would no longer be information for us, but an authentic experience. Do we feel the difference between information and experience at this moment?

It follows that we must not remain just with information about the Word of God made flesh. This information is to be transformed into an experience for us. But how can this happen? Saint John Chrysostom gives us the answer. He says: Fill your heart with a desire for God.” Desire is the deepest act of the soul. Desire for God is a much more beautiful act than love for God, gratitude, piety, his praise, or worship of God. We should put the desire for God into our prayer, into our devotion, into our work, into our deeds, into our free moments, into our rest, and into our suffering. Here we can take as an example the Old Testament psalmist who prays as follows: As the deer longs for the water brook, so my soul longs for you, O God. And this desire for God will lead us to a fervent personal experience of the Son of God among us.

The famous writer Leo Tolstoy writes about a peasant named Ilya who, through hard work and skill, had amassed great wealth. After many years of hard work, he amassed an immense fortune: he owned many horses and cows and several thousand sheep. He became a large landowner. But when he grew old, one misfortune after another befell him. His elder son lost his life in battle, his younger son became addicted to alcohol, his sheep became sick so that he had not a single one left, a gang of robbers robbed him of his horses, another took his cows, so that when Ilya was 70 years old, he was no longer a large landowner but a poor man without property, living his simple life. And when his younger son drove him out of the house, he and his wife had to seek a living with strangers. A kind-hearted peasant took them in to work in his stable. They earned their bread and lived in a room next to the stable.

Once, a relative of a peasant came to visit him and asked who the people living in the barn were. The peasant said, “They were once the richest people in the whole region, and now they live with me as servants and work in the stable.” The relative was intrigued by the case and went to them, asking, “How could you have fallen from such happiness to such poverty?” Ilya answered him: “My wife tells us best about our happiness and misfortune.” And she told him this: “For fifty years, my husband and I have been looking for happiness, but we have only found it now. When we were accumulating wealth through hard work, we had significant worries about our servants and maids, calves and foals, and cattle and wolves; we were afraid of robbers, so we had no time to devote ourselves to each other and talk peacefully.

We were nervous, and we cursed each other; we were angry with each other, and the worst thing is that we never had time to pray to God. For us, God did not exist. Now my husband and I peacefully do our work in the stable, and then we have enough time for ourselves, we talk and love each other. Instead of heavy material worries, our hearts are filled with a desire for God, and now we experience immense joy when we pray fervently together and when we go to church. Only now do we understand that God became man to dwell among us and make us content. Only now are we satisfied. Do we feel how important this question is for us? After all, it is these days that we wish each other a happy New Year. Therefore, let us draw deep into our souls the truth of today’s Gospel, that the Word became flesh and dwelt among us. Let us remind ourselves of it every day by praying the “Angel of the Lord” prayer, so that in the new year we may experience much joy and happiness from this truth. ,

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They gave him the name Jesus…

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He is coming after me. John 1,27

In December 1992, an Italian missionary arrived in Singapore. On his way to his mission in the evening by taxi, he saw Christmas lights everywhere, with symbols of the Christian Christmas holiday. He told the taxi driver, “I have never seen anything like it.” Encouraged by this confession, the man remarked, “For us in Singapore, Christmas is the most important holiday of the year.” “But what are you celebrating?” asked the missionary, wanting to get to know the driver’s thoughts. But the man did not answer. Even in Christian countries, where Christmas is celebrated as the Nativity of the Lord, some people do not know the answer to this question or the meaning of Christmas. That is why the Church says, on the eighth day after Christmas, the following sentence of John the Baptist: “Among you stands one whom you do not know.”

What does it mean to “know Jesus”? In all ancient and modern languages, including biblical Hebrew and Greek, the verb “to know” has a wide range of meanings. It can mean visual knowledge of a person, knowledge of everything or almost everything related to him, and sharing life, feelings, joys, and suffering. For us to know Jesus, human knowledge and experience are not enough. Such knowledge is why the evangelists speak of angels who announced the mysterious birth, and—as we will read in tomorrow’s Gospel—the heavens will be opened, from which the Holy Spirit will descend, confirming Jesus’ divine nature. Even if a person possessed all the knowledge found in the Gospels and other Scriptures about Jesus, they would still lack the gift of faith. Jesus will remain unknown.

In June 1994, the police found Brother Ettore, a Camillian who lived for and with the poor, during a check near the central station in Milan, where drug addicts and prostitutes meet. The policeman asked for his documents, checked them, and said, “Brother, you cannot stay here. What kind of religion is he to be here at this hour?” Someone shouted, “Leave him alone; he is Brother Ettore.” He said with a smile, “Mr. Policeman. Our Lady fulfilled her duties, but allow me to fulfill mine too.” The policeman objected, “What is duty? Please leave!” Although this episode did not occur on Christmas Eve, it convincingly shows that, for many Christians today, Christ remains someone and something unknown.

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Solemnity of the Blessed Virgin Mary, Mother of God, Lk 2:16-21)

At the beginning of the new year that the Lord grants to our lives, it is beneficial to raise the gaze of our hearts to Mary. For she, as a mother, sends us back into our relationship with her Son: she brings us back to Jesus, she speaks to us about Jesus, and she leads us to Jesus. The Solemnity of the Most Holy Mother of God thus immerses us once again in the mystery of Christmas: God became one of us in Mary’s womb, and we, who have opened the Holy Door to begin the Jubilee, recall today that “Mary is therefore the door through which Christ entered this world” (St. Ambrose, Epistle 42, 4: PL, VII).

 The Apostle Paul summarizes this mystery by stating that “God sent his Son, born of a woman” (Gal 4:4). These words—”born of a woman”—resonate in our hearts today and remind us that Jesus, our Savior, became flesh and is revealed in the fragility of the flesh.

 He was born of a woman. This expression brings us back to Christmas above all: the Word became flesh. The Apostle Paul specifies that he was born of a woman, almost feeling the need to remind us that God truly became man through a human womb. There is a temptation that fascinates so many people today but which can also tempt many Christians: to imagine or manufacture an “abstract” God, linked to a vague religious idea, to some fleeting beautiful emotion. Instead, he is concrete; he is human: he was born of a woman, he has a face and a name, and he calls us to enter into a relationship with him. Jesus Christ, our Savior, was born of a woman; he has flesh and blood; he comes from the womb of the Father, but he was incarnated in the womb of the Virgin Mary; he went from the highest heaven, but he dwells in the depths of the earth; he is the Son of God, but he became the Son of man. He, the image of Almighty God, came in weakness, and though He was without blemish, “God made Him to be sin for us” (2 Cor. 5:21). He was born of a woman and is one of us. He is one of us. That is why He can save us.

 He was born of a woman. This expression also speaks to us of Christ’s humanity, to tell us that he reveals himself in the fragility of the flesh. If he descended into the womb of a woman and was born like all creatures, here he reveals himself in the fragility of a child. That is why the shepherds who went to see with their own eyes what the angel had announced to them did not observe extraordinary signs or magnificent manifestations, but “they found Mary and Joseph, and the baby lying in a manger” (Lk 2:16). They found a helpless, fragile child who needed his mother’s care, needed swaddling clothes and milk, and needed caresses and love. Saint Louis Marie Grignion de Montfort says that divine Wisdom “did not want to give herself directly to men, even though she could have, but preferred to give herself through the Virgin Mary. Nor did she want to come into the world at the age of a perfect man, independent of others, but as a poor little child who required the care and nourishment of her mother” (Treatise on True Devotion to the Virgin Mary, 139). And so in the whole life of Jesus, we can see this choice of God, the choice of smallness and concealment; he never succumbs to the temptations of divine power to perform great signs and impose himself on others, as the devil suggested, but reveals God’s love in the beauty of his humanity, dwelling among us, sharing an ordinary life made up of work and dreams, showing compassion for the suffering of body and spirit, opening the eyes of the blind, and refreshing lost hearts. Compassion… The three attitudes of God are mercy, closeness, and compassion. God becomes close, merciful, and compassionate. Let us not forget this. Jesus shows us God through his fragile humanity and his care for the delicate.

 Sisters and brothers, it is beautiful to think that Mary, the girl from Nazareth, always leads us back to the mystery of her Son, Jesus. She reminds us that Jesus comes in the flesh, and therefore the privileged place where we can encounter him is above all in our lives, in our fragile humanity, and in the humanity of those who pass us by every day. And by invoking her as the Mother of God, we affirm that Christ was begotten of the Father but truly born of the womb of a woman. We proclaim that He is the Lord; He is the Lord of time, but with His loving presence, He also inhabits this time of ours, even this new year. We admit that He is the world’s Savior, but we must seek Him in every person. And if he, who is the Son, made himself small to allow himself to be taken into the arms of his mother, to be cared for and nurtured by her, then this means that even today he comes in all those who need the same care: in every sister and brother we meet, who needs attention, listening, and kindness.

 This new year that is opening, let us entrust to Mary, Mother of God, that we too may learn, like her, to find God’s greatness in the smallness of life; that we may learn to care for every creature born of woman and, above all, to protect the precious gift that is life, as Mary does: life in the womb, the life of children, the life of the suffering, the life of the poor, the life of the elderly, the lonely, and the dying. And today, on the World Day of Peace, it is precisely this invitation that flows from Mary’s maternal heart to which we are all called: we are called to care for life, to care for wounded life—so many wounded lives, so many—to restore the dignity of the life of every “born of woman”; it is the fundamental starting point for building a civilization of peace. Therefore, “I ask for a firm commitment to promote respect for the dignity of human life from conception to natural death, so that every person can love his or her life and look to the future with hope” (Message for the LVIII World Day of Peace, 1 January 2025).

 Mary, Mother of God, and our mother await us right in the manger. She shows us, as she did to the shepherds, a God who always surprises us, who does not come in the splendor of heaven, but in the smallness of a manger. Let us entrust this new Jubilee Year to her, let us hand over to her our questions, our worries, our sufferings, our joys, and everything we carry in our hearts. She is a mother. Let us entrust the whole world to her so that hope may be reborn, so that peace may finally sprout for all the peoples of the earth.

History tells us that when the bishops entered the church in Ephesus, the faithful people, with staffs in their hands, cried out, “Mother of God!” Those sticks were surely a promise of what would happen if the “Mother of God” dogma were not proclaimed. Today, we do not have sticks, but we do have a child’s heart and a voice. Therefore, let us all together invoke the Holy Mother of God.

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Seriously on New Year’s Eve

Another year is behind us with its three hundred and sixty-five days, with its work, and with its worries and joys. It is behind us, with its plans we could have implemented, as well as the less successful ones. The year has passed. But it is not erased. It has not been lost forever. That is why, at the end of the year, we look back, take stock, and conclude. Of course, these reflections extend beyond economics.

Everyone, although the end of the old and the beginning of the new year is associated more with external manifestations of joy and fun, should assess the previous period in the silence of their heart. Indeed, because good and evil endure past the stroke of midnight. He will accompany us as a guide to our future as well. An assessment before the “Lord of Time” can save us in the future.

We have lived this year, as in all others, immersed in its joys and miseries. We have heard and read a lot about the events of this year in recent days. Some things have interested us very much, others not. Naturally, everyone considers different values ​​to be significant and vital. 

Therefore, we reflect on what appears significant to us and what we believe is relevant to our lives. In the year that is ending, not so much the outstanding achievements and progress of our time have attracted interest, but rather concern and fear have appeared in people’s souls. The worries that weigh on the people of this earth are too significant. Concern for nutrition and health, for the climate and the protection of species, for peace, tranquility, social justice, and ensuring human dignity; concern for solidarity with the hungry and those who suffer injustice; concern for the consequences of biological and medical research and technical progress on the life of this earth. Politicians are paralyzing each other rather than reaching a consensus. And the moral reserves in our country?

When we reflect on this at the end of the year, we do so also with the intention of better recognizing the context of our lives, which cannot be separated and detached from the concerns of the world and the people of these times. It is not just a matter of wanting to change something around us, but, above all, a change primarily in us. God lends us a hand in this effort. Just a few days ago, we joyfully recalled his coming into this world as a man. This is not just the poetry of Christmas, but the reality of Christian everyday life… He gives us courage. We do not just have to complain, lament the misery of this world, or resign. “Behold, I am with you…”

“God carries the cosmos,” says Bishop Franz Kamphaus, and adds, “If we wanted to take the world into our own hands, we would be going terribly far. He carries the cosmos. If this is really the case, then we have free hands, feet, heads, and hearts to begin the reform of each of us: within ourselves, in the Church, and in society.” This courage comes from the trust that we are in God’s hands, that He is carrying us. With this trust, friends, let us enter the new year as new people.

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Finding time to meet God.

  It is not enough to have a vocation in life. Its fulfillment is different for each person. And this daily discovery of our vocation leads us to deepen our love for those for whom we are responsible. Life events often make it challenging for us to find a new direction. After the death of her husband, Anna dedicated herself entirely to God in service in the temple. She could have married another man, but in her search, she heard God’s voice. She indeed sought her next mission in prayer and “counseling” with God.

The prophetess Anna had the gift of the Holy Spirit—the grace to recognize the Son of God present. In the temple environment, in prayer, in renunciation, she opened herself to an encounter with God, who embraced her with his care. In the Holy Spirit, she rejoiced in the salvation of Israel, which came in the newborn Jesus, whom Mary and Joseph brought to the temple to present, as was the Jewish custom for firstborn sons. Occasionally, we complain that God does not speak to us. Such complaints may not be due to some “godly season” of typical dryness in our spiritual life. Occasionally, it is our fault when we drown out the moments when God wants to speak to us. We prevent God from speaking through television, our interests, and the way we solve our problems.

Let us ask what our life paths should be in the vocation we live. Let us pray and listen attentively to discern what God wants from us today. Through regular prayer, we can receive the gift of constant prayer, in which we go through life with a continuous focus on our Lord—the Redeemer. Let us not neglect any prayer that we should pray today. Encouraged by the example of the prophetess Anna, let us devote at least five minutes today to meet Jesus Christ, the coming Messiah and Redeemer. It is He who wants to touch our lives in a healing way. In those five minutes, let us give Him ourselves, our lives, and all that we have. Lord Jesus, provide us with your Spirit, that we may discern what our calling is and how we are to fulfill it. 

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