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Morning Devotions-Getting Started with Technology

Sunday, August 19, 2018 by Sarah 3 Comments

Comparing Ideals with Reality

As the sun rises, my morning flows gently around a routine of favorite prayers before breakfast. The smooth structure calls to mind the rhythm in the even spaced cells of a monastery. After breakfast, there’s ample time to absorb the scriptures while basking in the dawn’s rosy glow.

In my perfect world.

…which never seems to be the one I’m living in.

My schedule changes from one day to the next. Routines are impossible to keep. I’ve tried many times to incorporate a consistent prayer hour into my day’s routine, but I have never succeeded long term. The designated time is kept the designated time for a week or two, then life gets in the way. My favorite prayer books and devotionals sit unopened on my bedside table for weeks at a time.

I have to think about prayer like a physical fitness regimen. If it’s not prioritized, it won’t happen. If I don’t plan reasonable, doable goals, it won’t happen. It’s easy to see when a weekend warrior starts an elaborate, lengthy program that they will fail.

Small Steps with Media to Jump Start Prayer Time

I consider myself a realist. I imagine my highest goals knowing they will never succeed without careful implementation. To start a new task, I have to break it down in to the smallest steps possible. With each step I ask, will this happen? Can I envision myself doing this in a day?

If I want to start my day with readings from a specific book. Can I notice the book on the bedside table? What about picking up said book and opening it?

It’s easy to quote Yoda’s “Do, or do not. There is no try.” Just get it done, muscle your way through it. There is some truth in the adage. However, I don’t use this attitude to approach a large task. I use this for the task of picking up the light-saber, not when planning on facing and defeating Darth Vader.

Ways to Jump Start  Morning Devotions

This bite-size only approach turned out to work well for setting up a prayer routing. When using media to structure a prayer routine, the smallest step turns out to be just a click or tap.

So well, I was surprised by how easy it is to devote a large part of the morning once I got started.  One step always facilitates more. The beginning is the hardest. (Mary Poppins says, “well begun is half done” So half of a routine is finished with something as simple as a click or tap!

Since I found out how well this works for me, I’ve started to use a variety of resources such as:

  • Playlists on my smartphone entitled by the rough time of day can include a choice of songs, canticles, or psalms available through iTunes or Apple Music.
  • Bookmarking and making playlists for these on Youtube.
  • Using a favorites bar for easy access to day specific devotion and readings sites. (My favorite is Musical Breviary, which has the Divine Office sung)

How do you use technology and media to support your prayer life?

Posted in: Faith, Journal Tagged: Faith

Learning Presence from Mary

Wednesday, August 15, 2018 by Sarah 1 Comment

The image could have been titled Our Lady of the Smile, since this was the most entrancing feature. It was a depiction of Mary’s heavenly bliss, her face calm and radiant.  Looking at her face filled with Easter joy, I realized it was easy to forget the life she had to undergo beforehand. I’m sure her days in Roman occupied Judea were far from glamorous. It’s easy to think how rewarding and fulfilling it is to be a Christian in this life.  God’s grace is abundant and He often does let us have tastes of the rewards. However, to believe this is the . I once met someone who wasn’t sure they were living out their faith well enough. This was merely because their experiences fell short of the exuberant joys and blessings from Christian life some of their friends had shared.  I compare this idea what a faithful life is like to Mary’s own steps behind Christ’s way to Calvary, which called for a complete emptying of self.

 “A sword your soul shall pierce.”

I am told life is about showing up, no matter how hard the day. A large part of Mary’s role in the scriptures is one of presence. Mary is recorded as being present at many points in the Gospels, often in the company of several of the other women disciples. It must have been difficult to be in public as contention grew around her Son.  Christ’s family were referenced on several occasions by those who had been offended by Him. “Is not His mother Mary?”

I recall the words of Fulton Sheen “Her last recorded word was at the marriage feast of Cana, when her Divine Sone began His public life. Now that the sun was out, there was no longer need of the moon to shine. Now that the Word has spoken, there was no longer need of words” (Seven Last Words of Jesus and Mary). Her role from that time on was one of presence, as she walked in the footsteps of her Son. She continued in perseverance, even to her place at the foot of the cross on Calvary.

A short time later, she was present with the disciples in the Upper Room, waiting while they waited in patience for the fulfillment of Christ’s promise. Her presence on that glorious Pentecost could not have come without the earlier trials. Our Lady, Regina Caeli, is Our Lady of the Pieta.

 

 

Posted in: Faith, Journal Tagged: Faith, pondering

Chalk Thoughts

Thursday, June 7, 2018 by Sarah 1 Comment

Posted in: Faith Tagged: Faith, pondering, thrifty decor

Ash Wednesday

Wednesday, February 14, 2018 by Sarah 2 Comments

As I grew up, my family made bread a central part of Ash Wednesday meals. As a child, the tradition was a reminder of the special meaning of the day, and my siblings and I anticipated the trip to the local bakery to select a few special kinds. We heatedly debated between honey wheat, cinnamon, and sourdough loaves, which would accompany potato soup, macaroni and cheese, or perhaps baked fish that evening. Years later, I fondly adopt this practice as my own.

Now the hunger felt after a small and simple meal of bread and butter recalls a fitting verse for the beginning of Lent:

“Man must not live on bread alone but on every word that comes from the mouth of God” Mt 4:4

 “Bread” comes in many forms. The normal diet of my age group includes fare from major food groups such as movie star fashion and physique, Pinterest-style homes, and Facebook-perfect social life. Each promises to satisfy the cravings of the heart, but this is always false advertising. Like seconds of a favorite dessert, each extra helping leaves me feeling like I’ve indulged without anything to show for it.

Thus this season, where fasting and ‘giving up’ something occupying too much time in life gives an opportunity. It leaves an empty space-it’s easy to feel it when I find myself staring at the cupboard before realizing it’s a day of fasting, or stop myself about to impulsively scroll a favorite entertaining, but time wasting online site. This Lent, I’m praying that God will allow me to become conscious of that emptiness, the void I usually try to fill with empty calories instead of real nourishing spiritual food. The emptiness that only feels full when it’s filled with temporal things, but shows itself again when the brief pleasure of buying, or tasting, or any other experience is over. I’m praying that I will have the grace to simply give this vacancy to God, and allow Him to fill it as He will.

Posted in: Journal Tagged: Faith

Easter’s Octave-one birth, and one death

Wednesday, April 19, 2017 by Sarah Leave a Comment

Happy Eastertide!

Surrexit Christus hodie! Christ is risen today, Alleluia!

It is a beautiful week for the octave (eight days following) of Easter. Daffodils are in full bloom and birds are sitting on their eggs, so it seems a fitting time to celebrate our new life in Christ’s resurrection.

I am on the countdown of the last month till graduation. This week will see my last clinical day, when I work in the hospital as a student nurse. I am greatly anticipating the end of 5 am mornings coupled with hours of school reports afterward. I know I will be back to the hospital in July-as a full fledged nurse.

My final clinical rotation has been on the labor and delivery floor, it has been an amazing experience. I have been waiting for my Maternal and Fetal health class since the beginning of freshman year, and the unit did not disappoint. There has been an endless supply of newborns to hold, and I have loved caring for the tired but happy mothers.

During my time the unit I was privileged to assist at a birth, and additionally powerful experience since that the birth was during Holy Week, in the midst of the Triduum. As my lead nurse and I cared for the patient at the bedside, my mind was brought repeatedly to the verses of scripture referencing a woman’s experience of childbirth. The day left me keenly aware that the joy of the entrance of a new life must occur in the midst of great suffering. I recalled the words spoken  in the Garden of Eden.

In sorrow will you bring forth children ~Genesis 3:16

And as I had just heard the Gospel read which told of the agony Our Lord in the garden, I remembered that I had often heard of the parallels between Eden and Gethsemane, which was not unlike the dread I had witnessed in the patient.  I also thought of how similar language is used in the New Testament to speak of both labor and the Passion.

A woman, when she is in labour, has sorrow, because her hour is come ~ John 16:21

Christ often spoke of His coming suffering on the cross as His ‘hour’. The joy of Easter was coming, but first He had to bear the angst of Gethsemene, blood loss of the scourging, and finally undertake several hours of strenuous work as he suffered death on the cross. (One undergoing crucifixion must lift themselves by their arms and legs in order to take a breath, due to the extremely unnatural posture and weight distribution (1.)

The Crucifixion by Hans con Aachman

It was in the garden that both the pain of childbirth and the coming of Savior was promised to undo the evil that had entered the world.

I will put enmities between thee and the woman, and thy seed and her seed: He shall crush thy head, and thou shalt lie in wait for His heel. ~Genesis 3:15

I stood nearby my patient as climax of her struggle approached, unable to do anything more to help or assist her. Not long after, the world heard the first cries of a new voice in the world, and it was beautiful. As we sung the joyous hymns at Easter Mass, I kept in mind that Jesus compared the joy that would accompany His resurrection would be like the joy of a new mother.

But when she is delivered of the child, she no longer remembers the anguish, for joy that a child is born into the world. So also you now indeed have sorrow; but I will see you again, and your heart shall rejoice; and your joy no man shall take from you. ~ John 16:22

Resurrection of Christ by Hendrick van den Broeck

(1)Medical Aspects of the Crucifixion

 

Posted in: Faith, Journal Tagged: Faith, Nursing

Lenten Wreath

Monday, April 10, 2017 by Sarah 1 Comment

Decorating on a college student budget brings an interesting challenge. It causes me to see small objects and knick knacks in a different light. Rather than just looking at something as it is, I find myself asking, “How could I use this? How many different ways?”

One of my favorite embellishments has been this grapevine wreath. These are popular right now, so it’s hardly an original idea, but the number of ways to use it is limited only by the imagination, and presents endless opportunities for creativity. I enjoy changing out the ‘toppings’ woven into the vines to mark the changes in the seasons of the year.

To mark the weeks of Lent, I have a left most of the wreath bare. The stark wood reminds me of both the wood of the cross and the woven crown of thorns. The purple flowers show the traditional color of Lent, and the wrought iron cross is formed by two nails.

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Posted in: Journal Tagged: Crafting, Faith, thrifty decor

Judica Me, Deus

Saturday, July 16, 2016 by Sarah 2 Comments

Our world is again in mourning, the memory of one horrific and unexpected tragedy barely fades before a new atrocity occurs.

Judge me, O God, and distinguish my cause from the nation that is not holy: deliver me from the unjust and deceitful man.  For Thou, O God, art my strength: why hast Thou cast me off? Why do I go sorrowful whilst the enemy afflicteth me? ~Psalm 42

 This psalm, 42 or 43 depending on the translation, formed the prequel to the Extraordinary form of the mass until the changes in the 1900s.  The English words of the mass are now true to the words of the old Latin rite, used since the standardization at Trent in the 1500s, thanks to the re-translation of the holy Mass several years ago. However, the ‘prayers at the foot of the altar’ are still missing.

…why hast Thou cast me off? Why do I go sorrowful whilst the enemy afflicteth me?

I have occasionally found a strange preface to the Mass, the re-celebration of our salvation. But the more time that passes, the more I feel the echoes of the psalmist’s cry. The work of evil is clearly visible, showing itself brazenly in the recent tragedies of Paris, Brussels, Istanbul, and Orlando to name a few. And again at the latest atrocities at Nice, Dallas, and Baton Rouge. Words are insufficient for the sadness that these lives were ripped away so prematurely, and the grief of families mourning tragic deaths.

IMG_1010 - Version 2

 The psalmist concludes:

Send forth Thy light and Thy truth: they have led me and brought me unto Thy holy hill, and into Thy tabernacles. And I will go in unto the Altar of God: unto God, Who giveth joy to my youth. I will praise Thee upon the harp, O God, my God: why art thou sad, O my soul? and why dost thou disquiet me? Hope thou in God, for I will yet praise Him: Who is the salvation of my countenance, and my God.

The psalmist is not afraid to express his longing for God’s presence, especially when faced with temptations to despair under the attack of enemies both physical and spiritual. Yet he does not dwell long on these thoughts and immediately points to God’s Truth as the source of light and joy. This Truth is active, leading him forward to the Altar of the Lord, and  there he finds joy, hope, and salvation. This is the prelude to the Holy Mass, an invitation to God’s people to draw near His tabernacle, a source of hope amidst the tribulations of the life.

Adjutórium nostrum in nomine Dómini qui fecit cælum et terram. 

 Our help is in the Name of the Lord who made heaven and earth.

Posted in: Journal Tagged: Faith, pondering

For these last days of Advent

Monday, December 21, 2015 by Sarah 1 Comment

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This painting, rich in symbolism, has been a favorite of mine for years. Painted by Sister Grace Remington, of the Sisters of the Mississippi Abbey

Posted in: Faith, Journal Tagged: Faith

On This First Day of Lent

Wednesday, February 18, 2015 by Sarah 1 Comment

Happy Ash Wednesday! I always have a hard time registering every year that it is Lent already, here is something to make it easier to get into a Lenten mood. I sang this piece, Pergolesi’s Stabat Mater, last spring when I was a member of the women’s choir at my college (I’m in a mixed choir this year). I love the beautiful melody, and it remains my favorite piece of choral music I have heard to this day. The haunting, mournful music complements the words of the passiontide hymn, and I love the soprano and alto harmony throughout the piece. The words are:

Stabat mater dolorosa, juxta crucem lacrimosa, dum pendebat filius.

At the cross, her station keeping, stood the mournful mother weeping.

I am singing alto in the back row in this video, but I’m so short you can only see the top of my head!

Posted in: College Life, Faith, Journal Tagged: Faith, Music

On the Feast of the Little Flower

Monday, October 3, 2011 by Sarah 1 Comment

It is a wonderful privelage to have the stories and examples of the saints to help and encourage us in our path to heaven. I stand in awe of the courage of the martyrs of the early Church, and the good works of Blessed Mother Teresa of Calcutta in India are inspiring. When I read the writings of many of my favorite saints, including Saint Faustina and Teresa of Avila, I am amazed at how close they were to Our Lord.  Yet sometimes the saints and their greatness are intimidating, and I feel like throwing up my hands in hopelessness. How can I even hope to be like them?

St. Therese captured this sentiment perfectly when she said, “When I have compared myself with the saints, I have always found that there is the same difference between the saints and me as there is between a mountain whose summit is lost in the clouds and a humble grain of sand trodden underfoot by passers-by.”

But it was in this smallness that Therese found her path to greatness. She writes, “In spite of my littleness, I can aim at being a saint. It is impossible for me to grow bigger, so I put up with myself as I am, with all my countless faults. I was far too small to climb the steep stairs of perfection. So I sought in holy Scripture some idea of what this life I wanted would be, and I read these words: “Whosoever is a little one, come to me.” It is your arms, Jesus, that are the lift to carry me to heaven. And so there is no need for me to grow up: I must stay little and become less and less.”

” I understood that every flower created by Him is beautiful, that the brilliance of the rose and the whiteness of the lily do not lessen the perfume of the violet or the sweet simplicity of the daisy. I understood that if all the lowly flowers wished to be roses, nature would lose its springtide beauty, and the fields would no longer be enamelled with lovely hues.

“So it is in the world of souls, Our Lord’s living garden. He has been pleased to create great Saints who may be compared to the lily and the rose, but He has also created lesser ones, who must be content to be daisies or simple violets, nestling at His Feet to delight his eyes when He deigns to look down on them. The happier they are to be as He wills, the more perfect they are. I understood this also, that God’s Love is made manifest as well in a simple soul which does not resist His grace as it does through the greatest. In fact, the characteristic of love being self-abasement, if all souls resembled the holy Doctors who have illuminated the Church, it seems that God in coming to them would not stoop low enough. But He has created the little children, who know nothing and can but utter feeble cries and it is to their hearts that He deigns to stoop. These are the field flowers whose simplicity charms Him; and by His condescension to them Our Saviour shows His infinite greatness.”

A few weeks ago I began reading St. Therese’s autobiography for the third time, and the beauty of her writing struck me afresh. The words posses simplicity and earnestness, and I come away from reading them feeling encouraged and motivated. I see even such little things such as sweeping the floor and changing diapers in a new light, for as Therese says,  “Our Lord does not look so much at the greatness of our actions, nor even at their difficulty, but at the love with which we do them.”

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Posted in: Faith, Journal Tagged: Faith, pondering

Merry Christmas!

Sunday, December 26, 2010 by Sarah 1 Comment

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Posted in: Faith, Holidays, Journal Tagged: Faith

Mom’s Birthday

Friday, November 12, 2010 by Sarah 1 Comment

Sunday was both the end of daylight savings time and Mom’s birthday. We went out to Johnny Carinos, my favorite restaurant, where Mom got free tiramisu. The next day she opened a present that Landon, Maria, had I ordered her a birthday present and came a day late.

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We’ve been eying this statue of Our Lady for a long time, plotting to get it for her sometime. Once Mom was paging through the Leaflet Missal Catholic catalog, and she remarked that she had always liked that statue. Landon and Maria were with me, and they both winked and nudged me with their elbows at the same time. Thankfully, Mom didn’t see it.

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Posted in: Birthdays, Faith, Journal, Landon, Maria, Mom Tagged: Faith

Requiem Mass in the Octave of the All Souls

Friday, November 5, 2010 by Sarah 1 Comment

Last night I sang at a requiem mass for the Holy Souls in Purgatory. The Priest was dressed in black to symbolize our mourning for the dead, and the music was solemn and beautiful. Landon and John were both serving, and Landon was M.C., a part he had waited to be for a long time and only recently learned how to do.

The procession into church.

The procession into church.

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Genuflecting before the tabernacle.

Genuflecting before the tabernacle.

Incensing the altar.

Incensing the altar.

The Consecration

The Consecration.

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“It is therefore a holy and wholesome thought to pray for the dead, that they may be loosed from sins.” (2 Maccabees 12:46)

Posted in: Faith, Journal Tagged: Faith

All Saint’s Eve 2010

Wednesday, November 3, 2010 by Sarah 2 Comments

It’s been two years since we’ve had a homeschool All Saints Eve party, but this year it was announced on Oct 20 that we were starting up the tradition again. I spent Friday and Saturday sewing costumes, which turned out pretty well. Maria was St. Bernadette, Johnathan was St. Anthony, Alexander was St. Michael, and Joseph was St. Juan Diego. Maria and John slipped out the door before I could get a picture of them, but here are the little boys:

Daniel thought Joseph's makeup was really interesting. ("What is it with you people in the last week? First Sarah makes her eyes really strange and now you have black on your face!")

Daniel thought Joseph’s makeup was really interesting. (“What is it with you people in the last week? First Sarah makes her eyes really strange and now you have black on your face!”)

I made my first pleat on Alex's bottoms, and it turned out pretty well.

I made my first pleat on Alex’s bottoms, and it turned out pretty well.

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Daniel was a lion from Noah's Ark. This costume I didn't make.

Daniel was a lion from Noah’s Ark. This costume I didn’t make.

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He found the mane a little annoying

He found the mane a little annoying.

But that

But that’s OK, because he has a mane of his own!

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When we got home, everybody dived into their candy. Maria didn't like caramel apples, so she gave hers to me.

When we got home, everybody dived into their candy. Maria didn’t like caramel apples, so she gave hers to me.

Chewy pieces of candy are a good way to lose teeth.

Chewy pieces of candy are a good way to lose teeth.

Posted in: Alexander, Daniel, Faith, Holidays, Homeschooling, Joseph, Journal Tagged: Crafting, Faith, Family
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