May 25

Mary is called Our Lady of the Eucharist, because

without her, there would be no physical Body of Jesus

 to be present in the Eucharist. (See John 6:51)

Most kind Mother, we consecrate to you our bodies, which have just been honored and sanctified by the presence of your Divine Son, our souls which have conversed with him, and our hearts which have loved him.

O dearest Mother, may the words which we have spoken be made acceptable to him through your intercession. Tell him the things which we should have said but were unable to express. Love him and beseech him for us, your poor children.

Receive and keep us in your heart. Warn us, protect us and guide us during this day, that we may faithfully serve your Divine Son, and please him in all our thoughts, desires, and actions.

May 25

Your Cross

The everlasting God has in his wisdom foreseen from eternity the cross he now presents to you as a gift from his inmost heart. This cross he now sends you he has gazed at with his all-knowing eyes, understood with his divine mind, tested with his divine justice, warmed with his loving arms, and weighed with his own hands, to see that it be not one inch too large, not one ounce too heavy for you, He has blessed it with his holy name, anointed it with his grace, perfumed it with his consolation, taken one last glance at you and your courage, and then sent it to you from heaven – a special greeting from God to you – an alms of the all-merciful love of God.

 St. Francis de Sales

Jan 24

Hello and a belated Happy 2010.

I thought you might like to know about the author of all the material that gets posted to Catholicbooks.net.

His name is Fr. John H. Hampsch, CMF. He is a Claretian (Clair-e-shun) Missionary Priest. He was ordained in 1952 and was one of the very first Catholic priests to get involved in the charismatic renewal. (SEE: 1st Corinthians Ch 12 – 14).  He refers to himself as an itinerant preacher – teacher and during 2010 Fr. John will visit New Jersey, Illinois, Wisconsin, Texas, Montana, and Indiana – preaching and teaching…..

Father has had a remarkable life, he traveled to 55+ countries and been in all 50 states. He seen many people healed, some instantaneously from blindness to deafness to cancer.  He lives a very simple life. He has the vow of poverty. He drives a 1990’s Honda and frequents the $ dollar store.

The main focus of the / (his) ministry – Claretian Teaching Ministry – is healing: Spiritual, emotional, and physical. Father has spend years studying the subject of demonology so many of the phone calls and emails deal with spiritual warfare, healing of the family tree, and about anything else that people have questions about. Sorry about the preposition.

If any of you are interested in writing Fr. John, his email address is hampschctm@aol.com.

If you’re interested in looking at everything he has either written or produced, you can visit our main web site: www.claretiantapeministry.org

God Bless you today and all days,

Bob S.

Dec 05

By bringing God to the human race, Mary became the model of the Church in that same function – a function for which it is called to be “without stain … holy and blameless” (Eph. 5:27). It was thus appropriate for God to predestine her to pattern his ideal for the Church, by keeping her immaculate and unstained.

To the serpent (Satan) in the Garden of Eden, after the “Fall,” God said, “I will put enmity between you and the woman, and between your seed and her seed; he shall crush your head” (Gen 3:15). In this passage (called the “protoevangelium” or “prefigured Gospel”) the word “he” refers to the woman’s offspring, which in the Hebrew text is a masculine word, logically leading Christian tradition to refer to the woman’s offspring as Christ; who else but Christ, by the redemption, would crush the head of the serpent? If this offspring of the woman is Christ, then the “woman” must be Mary, referred to prophetically, not Eve. The prophesied “enmity” between Satan and this woman, Mary, bespeaks an uncompromising opposition between the initiator of sin and a sinless woman, who was most highly graced or “full of grace” as totally sinless.

Mary, as the God-assigned “enemy” of Satan, would have to be one who had never been under his dominion by either original or personal sin, in order to be maximally worthy to tabernacle in her body the “Offspring” prophesied in Genesis – the sinless God Incarnate – and bring him forth to redeem a sin-filled world.

The prophesied victory of “crushing” the power of Satan would not be a meaningful victory if the conquering Redeemer had assumed his body from a woman who had been subject to the Adversary (which is the very meaning of “Satan”). Christ’s victory would have been only a Pyrrhic victory if his suffering and glorified Body – the very instrument of the victorious redemption (1 Cor. 11 :24) – had been drawn from a mother who had been contaminated or “conquered” by his enemy through sin. Christ would not derive his sinless body from a mother’s body that had been even slightly sin-contaminated.

These are a few of the multifarious insights that the Spirit has delivered to the Church in the gradual Scripture-based development of Mariology through the centuries. The theological insights mentioned here deal with only one Marian privilege – her Immaculate Conception.

Let us never weary of praising God, as Mary did, for all she has received from him for us to enjoy and admire. Truly, “he who is mighty has done great things” for us by doing such great things for Mary, as “our tainted nature’s solitary boast.” As part of “all generations” that will call her blessed, let us admire and honor God’s splendiferous masterpiece; in doing so we will be implicitly honoring the divine Artist himself who fashioned her.

Glad You Asked” by Fr. John Hampsch, CMF

Nov 26

For those of you that are wondering about the “fear of the Lord” — The correct definition is:

“A fear of offending God” Not a Fear of God……

Happy Thanksgiving

Nov 12
Let us consider the assertion that no mediumship or mediation is needed to interpret God’s word. For most of Scripture, that is true. That’s another way of saying that the Church permits freedom of interpretation of Scripture for most of the biblical passages. In fact, the Catholic Church probably grants more freedom of interpretation than most Protestant denominations do, for they have very strictly defined explanations of critical passages, not allowing for much leeway for the private judgment of their members on such issues as water baptism, infant baptism, divorce and remarriage, faith related to works, the doctrine of the Eucharist, Peter’s primacy, the role of tradition in revelation, etc.
Protestantism began with Luther advocating private interpretation of Scripture, reasoning that if the Pope could interpret the Bible, why couldn’t anyone else? But his sermons and writings later in life indicated that he retreated from that position after seeing the disastrous results of having unqualified persons equating their knowledge to that of Scripture scholars.
” ‘Do you understand what you are reading?’ Philip asked the eunuch. ‘How can I,’ he said ‘unless someone explains it to me?’ ” (Acts 8:30-31). God expects us to make use of human guidance in spiritual matters as well as in non-spiritual education. Otherwise all seminaries, Bible schools and Sunday school classes would be obliged to shut down.
Peter wrote that Paul’s epistles “contain some things that are hard to understand, which ignorant and unstable people distort as they do the other Scriptures, to their own destruction… be on your guard that you may not be carried away by the error… “(2Pet.3:16-17).
Clearly, the Bible points up the need for religious leaders as “overeers” (1 Pet. 5:2), preachers (4:11), teachers (Rom. 12:7), leaders (vs.8), and also the obligation to respect and obey them (1 Thess. 5: 12; 1 Tim. 5: 17; Heb. 13: 17). Even a casual reading of Scripture will show that God designed that the Kingdom should be built by guidance and instruction of God, directed through human instruments (Mt. 28: 19-20; Rom. 12: 16). To arrogantly ignore those divinely appointed instruments is to defy the design of God himself, and truth sought in that manner will have only “the appearance of wisdom” with “self-imposed worship” and “false humility” (Col. 2:23).
Countless examples in the New Testament attest to the fact that preaching, administration of sacraments, and also interpretation of Scripture itself are performed by a sacred minister between an individual believer and Christ. Of course these acts of mediation are in no way obstacles to union with God, but are facilitators of that union.
A Catholic who truly understands the Church’s role in scriptural interpretation is very uninhibited in reading the Bible. Catholics are instructed to read a given passage according to the intent of the sacred author, which is usually clear from the context of the passage itself or of the entire book. If that fails to yield a clear understanding, the Catholic consults the accumulated wisdom of the Church.
The Vatican II document on Divine Revelation (Dei Verbum) puts it this way: “The task of authentically interpreting the word of God, whether written or handed on, has been entrusted exclusively to the living teaching office of the Church, whose authority is exercised in the name of Jesus Christ. This teaching office is not above the word of God, but serves it, teaching only what has been handed on, listening to it devoutly, guarding it scrupulously, and explaining it faithfully by divine commission and with the help of the Holy Spirit; it draws from this one deposit of faith everything which it presents for belief as divinely revealed” (no. 10).
As Father Raymond Brown points out in the Jerome Biblical Commentary, the Church exercises great restraint in offering authoritative interpretations of individual verses; fewer than a dozen such instances can be pointed to in her two-thousand-year history, most of them at the Council of Trent, and never in matters such as authorship or dating of a book. Hence the Church certainly doesn’t use a heavy hand to stifle private interpretation, but presents official interpretations of such things as Petrine (papal) primacy in Matthew 16:17-19 and John 21:15-19, or James 5:14 as related to the sacrament of the anointing of the sick, and the literal interpretation of the accounts in John 6, attesting to the Real Presence of Christ in the Eucharist.
To insist on one’s own interpretation on points contrary to twenty centuries of authentic, authoritative, and scholarly understanding of a particular passage would be an inexcusable form of sheer arrogance.

Let us consider the assertion that no mediumship or mediation is needed to interpret God’s word. For most of Scripture, that is true. That’s another way of saying that the Church permits freedom of interpretation of Scripture for most of the biblical passages. In fact, the Catholic Church probably grants more freedom of interpretation than most Protestant denominations do, for they have very strictly defined explanations of critical passages, not allowing for much leeway for the private judgment of their members on such issues as water baptism, infant baptism, divorce and remarriage, faith related to works, the doctrine of the Eucharist, Peter’s primacy, the role of tradition in revelation, etc.

Protestantism began with Luther advocating private interpretation of Scripture, reasoning that if the Pope could interpret the Bible, why couldn’t anyone else? But his sermons and writings later in life indicated that he retreated from that position after seeing the disastrous results of having unqualified persons equating their knowledge to that of Scripture scholars.

” ‘Do you understand what you are reading?’ Philip asked the eunuch. ‘How can I,’ he said ‘unless someone explains it to me?’ ” (Acts 8:30-31). God expects us to make use of human guidance in spiritual matters as well as in non-spiritual education. Otherwise all seminaries, Bible schools and Sunday school classes would be obliged to shut down.

Peter wrote that Paul’s epistles “contain some things that are hard to understand, which ignorant and unstable people distort as they do the other Scriptures, to their own destruction… be on your guard that you may not be carried away by the error… “(2Pet.3:16-17).

Clearly, the Bible points up the need for religious leaders as “overeers” (1 Pet. 5:2), preachers (4:11), teachers (Rom. 12:7), leaders (vs.8), and also the obligation to respect and obey them (1 Thess. 5: 12; 1 Tim. 5: 17; Heb. 13: 17). Even a casual reading of Scripture will show that God designed that the Kingdom should be built by guidance and instruction of God, directed through human instruments (Mt. 28: 19-20; Rom. 12: 16). To arrogantly ignore those divinely appointed instruments is to defy the design of God himself, and truth sought in that manner will have only “the appearance of wisdom” with “self-imposed worship” and “false humility” (Col. 2:23).

Countless examples in the New Testament attest to the fact that preaching, administration of sacraments, and also interpretation of Scripture itself are performed by a sacred minister between an individual believer and Christ. Of course these acts of mediation are in no way obstacles to union with God, but are facilitators of that union.

A Catholic who truly understands the Church’s role in scriptural interpretation is very uninhibited in reading the Bible. Catholics are instructed to read a given passage according to the intent of the sacred author, which is usually clear from the context of the passage itself or of the entire book. If that fails to yield a clear understanding, the Catholic consults the accumulated wisdom of the Church.

The Vatican II document on Divine Revelation (Dei Verbum) puts it this way: “The task of authentically interpreting the word of God, whether written or handed on, has been entrusted exclusively to the living teaching office of the Church, whose authority is exercised in the name of Jesus Christ. This teaching office is not above the word of God, but serves it, teaching only what has been handed on, listening to it devoutly, guarding it scrupulously, and explaining it faithfully by divine commission and with the help of the Holy Spirit; it draws from this one deposit of faith everything which it presents for belief as divinely revealed” (no. 10).

As Father Raymond Brown points out in the Jerome Biblical Commentary, the Church exercises great restraint in offering authoritative interpretations of individual verses; fewer than a dozen such instances can be pointed to in her two-thousand-year history, most of them at the Council of Trent, and never in matters such as authorship or dating of a book. Hence the Church certainly doesn’t use a heavy hand to stifle private interpretation, but presents official interpretations of such things as Petrine (papal) primacy in Matthew 16:17-19 and John 21:15-19, or James 5:14 as related to the sacrament of the anointing of the sick, and the literal interpretation of the accounts in John 6, attesting to the Real Presence of Christ in the Eucharist.

To insist on one’s own interpretation on points contrary to twenty centuries of authentic, authoritative, and scholarly understanding of a particular passage would be an inexcusable form of sheer arrogance.

Glad You Asked” by Fr. John Hampsch, cmf

May 23

If you would like a copy of “The Healing Power of the Eucharist” or any other book, booklet, CD or DVD from Father Hampsch’s collection, please visit www.claretiantapeministry.org or Call (310) 782-6408 on Tuesday or Thursday during normal business hours. We are located in Southern California and are on Pacific Daylight Time. OR go to LINKS (to the right of this entry) and click on MAIN CTM WEB SITE.

Mar 10

The following is also posted under the PRAYER tab – See above

The six major blessings have not been used very much since Vatican 11, when the blessing rituals were simplified. But those blessings have not been abrogated either, so they’re still valid. I received the privilege of administering them from the Holy See in 1952 as a an indult granted to perpetually enrolled members of the Near East Donors’ Association. Each blessing has its own set of indulgences–too numerous to list (or remember). 

The blessings for all religious articles are the so-called ABCD Blessings: 1) Apostolic blessing (the one that the Pope gives in his general blessings; 2) Brigittine blessing formerly granted through the Brigittine Order of monks; 3) Crosier blessing, granted through the Crosier Order of Priests and Brothers; 4) Dominican blessing, from the Order of St. Dominic; 5) Way of the Cross blessing (for crucifixes only, not crosses); and finally the Happy Death blessing (for crucifixes only, not crosses). 

The last-mentioned “Happy Death crucifix blessing” enables anyone to receive a plenary indulgence at the hour of death, if the person is near death (” in articulo mortis”) who holds or looks upon this crucifix devoutly and has true and perfect contrition for all the sins of his or her life. 

John H. Hampsch, CM.F.

Feb 25

Heavenly Father, most gracious and loving God, I pray to you that you abundantly bless my family and me. I know that you recognize, that a family is more than just a mother, father, sister, brother, husband and wife, but all who believe and trust in you. 

GOD, I send up a prayer request for financial blessing for not only the Person who sent this to me, but for me and all that I have forwarded this message on to. And that the power of joined prayer by those who believe and trust in you is more powerful than anything. I thank you in advance for your blessings. God, deliver the person reading this right now from debt and debt burdens. 

Release your Godly wisdom that I may be a good steward over all that you have given me, GOD, for I know how wonderful and mighty you are and how, if we just obey you and walk in your word and have the faith of a mustard seed, that you will pour out blessings. I thank you now Lord for the recent blessings I have received and for the blessings yet to come, because I know you are not done with me yet. In Jesus’ name I ask. Amen 

+++++++++++++++ 

TAKE 60 SECONDS and send this on quickly and within hours, you will have caused a multitude of people to pray to God for each other. Then sit back and watch the power of God work in your life for doing the thing that you know he loves. Peace and Blessings …. Ask the Lord to give you, day by day, more and more faith. 

++++++++++++++++ 

Jan 30

“Prosperity and Trust”

“Mediocrity and Trust”

“Self- Discipline and Trust”