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Christmas from the heart of the holy family

«A child is born to us, and he is the Prince of peace»

(Isaiah 9:5-6)

  To enter into the climate, the atmosphere, the shelter of Mary and Joseph’s home, to enter quietly, in absolute silence and if possible, in their interiority, with those delicate feelings that deliver the motions of the free spirit, which knows of profound annihilation, of refinement of the soul and of joy that transcends these sensitive coordinates of history, is to follow step by step the pilgrimage of them, Mary and Joseph in the expectation of our Emmanuel.

To go to Bethlehem, a journey that must be made, with few things, in haste, but with the joy that enlarges the heart, lights up the eyes and prepares the being to sing and proclaim with the Baptist: «Prepare the way, make ready the paths for our Good that is coming» (Isaiah 40:3; Matthew 3:3).

Mary and Joseph know that the hour is approaching, they understand that the Child God is about to come forth into the universe, (Micah 5:1-2) in Bethlehem, in a cave, where the irrelevant have made room for shelter, warmth, closeness…. Mary’s whole being is unconditional openness to let the treasure, the light, the Expected One, the promise, life itself shine through…there is a deep silence and a mysterious surge of peace…which is only interrupted by the joyful and tender singing of «Glory to God in heaven and on earth peace to men with burning hearts» (Luke 2:14). The heavens and the earth clap their hands, the stars shine more brightly, the trills of birds sing in unison, a gracious symphony to this newborn, who in a stable establishes the wealth of God on earth (Isaiah 9:5).

Joseph and Mary, absorbed and silent, intertwined their gazes, smile and adore the presence of Love in the universe. (Isaiah 9:2) Mary holds him in her arms, because her whole heart, her whole being as a woman, now contemplates with emotion the Son of the Father, humane, tender, infant, weak… Joseph observes the Mother with the Child, he has no other attitude than to adore, to contemplate… She, the Mother, gathers her immense joy in abundant tears, which run down her cheeks and even reach the little one and make him smile… What a language of love, what a language of poverty, of the self-abasement, of the lack of self-esteem of our God. What a language he discovers who understands the mysteries of love, presence, enchantment, closeness, reverie, because a Child has been given to us, a brother on the way has been given to us (Isaiah 9:5).

And Joseph follows step by step the mystery that now becomes so close to him, so palpable: He who owns the universe, because it came from his hands, now shivering with cold, the one who made this wonderful set of harmony that is the cosmos and in it man, groans of love, what a wonderful exchange, leaves his, takes what is ours, our weakness, outdated, his eternity, immutable. Joseph and Mary, together continue to observe him, they do not want to lose a single one of his expressions…his eyes smile and cry with love, what a sweet smile, what a tender lover, his pink lips express candor, his chest is heaven for the one who is faithful, his small hands, so soft they are, will gladly indicate the good that generates peace in justice; his feet so small, will insinuate the path to follow, the path of strangers and pilgrims who, with nothing of their own, launch themselves to new conquests from the Spirit. Mary and Joseph, from this style of free, poor and humble life, are gathering in their hearts, the language of the highest poverty-richness of God, who becoming one of us, wanted to live in our land, in the periphery, to walk with each of us ….

As we contemplate in joy the Trinity of the Earth: Jesus, Mary and Joseph, in the celebration of our Christmas, a deep cry arises deep within us to «listen to the motions that inhabit us, there where God continues to write his story with us, we are seekers who want to be happy to spread to others the joy of living, each one in her own process, we are invited to enter into our inner sanctuary, to ask ourselves vital questions that push us to continue growing as persons, learning to exist in fullness, to name our needs, emotions and desires» (Caring for our own life, message XXIII Chap. General). It is there, in the warmth of the family of Nazareth, that we recover the renewed joy of knowing we are loved, saved and called to enjoy the very richness of this family which, by gathering us together in a community «fraternal in faith, hope and love» (Constitutions 28), also urges us to «put more joy, trust and hope in our world, and to carry out gestures of evangelical life that lead to justice and peace». (Caring for the lives of the poor, message of the XXIII General Chapter).

Sister Lilyám del Carmen Ramírez Cañizales

Capuchin Tertiary Sister of the Holy Family

Guatemala

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Mary, woman of hope

The end of the fiscal year will soon come to a close, in some countries the academic year has come to an end, others are about to do so, and so on, our life is one of closing some cycles and opening others; each stage is loaded with a myriad of experiences of all kinds. At the liturgical level the Church gives us the gift of a new Advent, and we are invited to make it an experience that renews our strength, like a glass of fresh water after a long journey under the sun.

Looking at the realities experienced this year in the different regions of the world, we contemplate truly hopeless panoramas: the issue of war, which seems to be a trite topic, but which continues to claim lives, causing anxiety and pain, the waves of tired and hungry migrants, the political situation in so many nations that curtails freedom, undermines the basic rights of millions of people, the aftermath of the Pandemic, the indiscriminate damage to our mother earth, to name a few.

For this reason, we are invited to rekindle hope. Although there are many texts written on this subject, on this occasion we could meditate with new eyes on some texts of the Evangelist Luke regarding the attitudes of the Virgin Mary and on the thought of the Brazilian educator and philosopher Paulo Freire.

Let us remember how Mary has given us proof of her hope. This young Nazarene, as a woman of her time, had experiences very similar to ours and even in the midst of them she knew how to listen to the word of God who spoke to her through mediation. The evangelist Luke makes it clear to us:

«In the sixth month the angel Gabriel was sent from God to a city of Galilee, called Nazareth, to a virgin betrothed to a man whose name was Joseph, of the house of David; the virgin’s name was Mary. And he went in and said to her, «Rejoice, full of grace, the Lord is with you. She was troubled at these words, and wondered what the greeting meant.  And the angel said to her, «Do not be afraid, Mary, for you have found favor with God; you will conceive in your womb and bear a son, and you shall call his name Jesus. He will be great and will be called the Son of the Most High, and the Lord God will give him the throne of his father David» (Lk 1:26, 32).

When we look at Mary, we see her capacity to serenely welcome the bewilderment and continue the dialogue with the angel.  Looking at ourselves, we could verify these same qualities and also ask ourselves: How do I encourage true listening to God, to what spaces do I allow him to enter? Perhaps I have established schedules, known patterns, but perhaps there are corners of my being where I have not yet invited him to enter?

«Mary answered the angel, «How shall this be, since I know not a man?» The angel answered her, «The Holy Spirit will come upon you, and the power of the Most High will overshadow you; therefore the child to be born will be holy and will be called the Son of God.» (Lk 1:34-35

For «precisely one who – like Mary – is totally open to God, comes to accept the Divine Will, even if it is mysterious, even if it often does not correspond to one’s own will» (Pope Benedict XVI, December 2012). Mary gives a response and as a consequence of this listening and availability she receives a mission that surprises her, unsettles her and she sets herself in motion:

«In those days Mary arose and went with haste into the hill country, to a city of Judah; she entered the house of Zechariah and greeted Elizabeth.» (Lk. 1:39-40)

Mary is a woman of active hope, she does not remain with her arms folded waiting to see what will happen. Regarding the hope that Mary brings to life, we could enlighten ourselves with the words of Paulo Freire:

«It is necessary to have hope, but to have hope from the verb, to hope; because there are people who hope from the verb to hope.  And the hope of the verb to hope is not hope, it is waiting.  To hope is to get up, to hope is to go forward, to hope is to build, to hope is not to give up.  To hope is to carry forward, to hope is to join with others to do otherwise.»

Mary shows us that she is a woman of hope because she lived the verb to hope, rising up and putting herself at risk because of the state she was in walking towards the mountains of Judah, she went out in step with Elizabeth’s needs.  And even more so in Herod’s persecution of the Child, she did not give up when she had to flee to Egypt (cf. Mt. 2:13-15).

Let us turn our eyes to Mary, we will find in her courage and strength. How can we live so that this Advent is not just another Advent, but one that brings us newness?

From the reality that surrounds us

In our daily chores

In our encounters with the Lord, with our brothers and sisters.

How do we give life to the verb to HOPE?

 

Sister  Nancy Margoth Monterroso Monterroso. tc

Provincia Nuestra Señora de Guadalupe

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Pope Francisco promulgates motu proprio on the financial control of institutions

Pope Francis promulgated an Apostolic Letter in the form of a «Motu Proprio» on the «juridical persons instrumental to the Roman Curia» in which he reaffirms the importance of the control and surveillance of financial transactions.

The Press Office of the Holy See released this new «Motu Proprio» signed by Pope Francis on December 6, together with the law «on juridical persons in the Vatican City State» which is scheduled to begin on December 8.

The new law is composed of 22 articles and is signed by the President of the Governorate of the Vatican City State, Cardinal Fernando Vergez Alzaga, and by the Secretary General of the same Dicastery, Sr. Raffaella Petrini.

“The person who is trustworthy in very small matters is also trustworthy in great ones.”

Pope Francis quotes Luke (16:10a) at the start of the Motu Proprio. The Motu Proprio consists of 8 articles. In the introduction, the Pope points out that after the promulgation of the apostolic constitution «Praedicate Evangelium» it is also «necessary to regulate the various funds, foundations and entities which, over the years, have arisen within the curial institutions and depend directly on them.»

For this reason, the Pope established that this «regulation applies to the instrumental juridical persons» that refer to the Holy See, registered in Article 1 of the Statute of the Council of the Economy and located in the Vatican City State, «to the exclusion of the Curial Institutions and the offices of the Roman Curia, of the Institutions connected to the Holy See and of the Governorate of the Vatican City State.»

Among the technical aspects addressed in the document, it highlights the importance of the supervision and «vigilance and control in economic-financial matters» carried out by the Secretariat for the Economy.

Source: Vatican news

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International Migrants’ Day

In view of the increase in migratory flows in the world, in the year 2000 the UN general assembly proclaimed December 18 as International Migrants’ Day, with the aim of promoting the exchange of experiences and opportunities for collaboration among countries and regions in the face of the difficulties of international migration.

The purpose of this event is to highlight the challenges, difficulties and adversities faced by migrants around the world, as well as to call on the nations of the world to contribute to making migration a safe, regular and dignified process.

Origin of Migrants’ Day

One of the main antecedents in the creation of this event lies in the adoption of the International Convention on the Protection of the Rights of All Migrant Workers and Members of Their Families by the General Assembly of the United Nations in 1990.

Human migration refers to the processes of voluntary or forced migration of people from their country of origin or residence, on a permanent or temporary basis.

Paradoxically, the restrictive migration policies imposed by countries, together with the manifestations of xenophobia, have limited such processes, contributing to the increase of the social phenomenon of «illegal persons» or «undocumented» ones.

Fuente: www.clacso.org

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Pope on wyd 2023: Volunteers are a «Striking force».

Francis sends a video message in Spanish on the occasion of the World Volunteer Day being celebrated today to speak of the generosity of all those who sustain the work of the church with their volunteer work. «Volunteering,» he explains, «is a grace of God.»

«Volunteering is a ‘driving force’ that allows us to go outside the box in order to achieve something.» In a video message in Spanish, Francis addressed the volunteers of the WYD 2023, from August 1-6 in Lisbon (Portugal), to thank them, on the occasion of the World Day of volunteering that is celebrated today, for «their generosity», the «generosity of each volunteer», they who are an overwhelming force, «a force of the Church, an expression of the mission of the Church», because they are the ones who maintain with their “volunteering, the action of the Church».

Fuente: https://lisboa2023.org

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“They go out they out full of tears, carrying seeds for the sowing. They come back they come back full of songs, carrying their sheaves.” ( Ps. 126, 5-6

This verse of Palm 126: 5 was resounding in my heart and mind while boarding the airplane bound to Tanzania-Africa. It describes exactly my feelings and determination to reach the place where our Almighty God calls me to go. And precisely, after my first three years of missionary service proceeding for my vacation, the joy (Psalm 126:6) in my heart to return and share my experiences was long lasting until the time I and writing this article. In deed God’s project for each one of us is ever a call to live our lives fully.  And I will forever sing His Praise and Glory for the gift of my parents and my big family, my friends and relatives, for the gift of my sisters in the Congregation, for the gift of my faith, the gift our Beloved Congregation of the Capuchin Tertiary Sisters of the Holy Family where my life is nurtured since I joined in the congregation until this stage of middle adulthood.

It is really beautiful to gaze back and see a life lived full of colors of lights and shades, ups and downs, rise and falls but as whole I could contemplate a beautiful work of God in me through His constant Love, Mercy and Providence. With Mary our mother, I sing the Magnificat in every evening prayer with my community and the faithful people who joins our mission.  

As a Capuchin Tertiary Sisters of the Holy Family, I just understood at he very first contact with our first missionary sisters to the Philippines, that to be a Capuchin Tertiary Sister is to be a missionary outside my home country. From the life testimony of our sisters, I learned that to be a missionary is to share the most ordinary day to day life in the spirit of prayer, community life and in the specific service of the congregation. To offer our service to the people in our Franciscan-Amigonian spirituality. Although we must understand that missionary life should be lived wherever we are whether within or outside our home country.

Briefly my life’s journey in Tanzania started in 1st January, 1998 until this year 2022 with two years pause in the year 2010-2011 for higher studies and still on service in mission until this time.  All throughout my stay in Tanzania I served and currently serving in the field of Education. How’s my experience? I say it’s Great and Wonderful! Joyfully lived with all my imperfections, setbacks, failures and successes.

Tanzania is now my second home country, just like other countries it has its own riches and unique culture. The Catholic Faith expression specifically in liturgy is vibrant and long. They have a very deep sense of solidarity. They are a people with extended family in the literal sense. They celebrate and mourn in the spirit of unity marked by serous ceremonial program. They are joyful, hospitable, loving and beautiful people. Tanzania is geographically beautiful, rich with natural parks and mostly known for having the famous majestic Kilimanjaro Mountain.  The children and young people are respectful and generally characterized with strong endurance in facing the common the challenges of their life. These are the few descriptions I could share and I invite my sisters to come and see the beauty of Tanzania. I thank and love Tanzanian for teaching me in many ways.

As a religious serving in the field of education, the central message of all my effort big or small is to simply share the liberating message of the Gospel of Jesus in the ordinary and routinary activities of a religious life.  I translate this Liberating Gospel message firstly by acknowledging at the beginning of each day in prayer that each day is a gift from God and nothing good can come out of that gift without his grace. Prayer Life is above all because it is there where I draw my strength and inspiration to go out to meet people, the students and school staff, parents and neighbors in order to serve.  Secondly, I try to be in union with my community in all its daily activities, prayers, meals, recreation and work and try I in my best ability to be in communication and dialogue with my sisters in the community and the people I serve and work with. I testify that walking together with my sisters in the congregation is a beautiful gift to treasure in the heart with all its challenges and difficulties.  And thirdly, the service without reservation is what gives meaning to my prayers and living with my community. For without reaching out to the people who needs my time and talents everything is non sense. To sum up those are my ways of living a happy and contented life as a Capuchin Tertiary Sister of the Holy Family.

This year 2022, is the 24th year of my life outside my native country. Perhaps I have not done great things but what is important the totality of my self-offering and following Our Lod Jesus in Religious Life and with that I am truly happy and I feel that 24 years have passed just like yesterday. I PRAISE AND GLORIFY JESUS OUR LOVING GOD AND SAVIOUR!

Hna. Nida Galera, TC

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A history, given as a gift: Testimony and prophetic strength

The Beatitudes are, without a doubt, the most perfect synthesis of the Gospel and the most successful expression of its scale of values. In them is contained, and expressed with depth of poetry, the truth that Christ came to reveal Himself to the world. A truth that profoundly liberates man. A truth that matures the person in his humanity. A truth that is, in short, love.

Only he who learns to love, matures integrally. Man made in the image and likeness of a God who is Love; it is the only foundation on which a balanced and happy personality can be built. But the lesson of love is difficult to learn. Selfishness, the root of all major sins, which is only personal gain or possession and domination of others at times, tends to clothe with the mantle of dedication and openness to others; therefore, the beatitudes, in conveying the message of a truth founded on love, dwell on the nuances that make love – truth. And they come to tell us that love is such if it is interwoven with the gift of self and possessions, service to others, the strength to die to self and create community with others, justice according to God’s original plan for man and society, preferential dedication to those most in need, generosity and clean intentions, and great interior and exterior peace. This message of truth like love and from the love of truth, is, however, prophetic by its very nature and creates divisions and struggles that all the more stronger and violent, the more a society is founded on consumerism, lust for power, legalized injustice or other multiple forms of personal and even structural selfishness. Freedom always has a price. And the price to pay for evangelical freedom, for truth and justice for man and society, is persecution. The eighth beatitude, compilation and conclusion of the other seven, is very clear: Blessed are those who are persecuted for righteousness’ sake, for theirs is the Kingdom of Heaven, blessed are you when they insult you, persecute you, and with lies do all evil against you for my sake. Wherever the Church is coherent with its message, it is rejected or persecuted. And it is so much more rejected or persecuted the greater its coherence. The forms of persecution are, however, many and varied. There are more underhanded persecutions, and not for that reason less harmful, that try to win the silence of the Church with offers and benefits. Those who act in this way know that it is better for them to have a perverted Church than a persecuted one. There are others, carried out with silk glove that does not martyrize the Church, but silence her and corner her in the sacristies. And there are others, such as that suffered in Spain during the civil war, which are truly bloody. These different types of persecution, a permanent sign of the proclamation of the Kingdom, accompany the Church in her daily pilgrimage through the world. And the Congregation of Capuchin Tertiary Sisters of the Church and citizen in very diverse cultures and nations has also experienced in different times and countries the risk of announcing Christ and collaborating in the construction of the civilization of love: What happened in Spain in 1936 is for the Capuchin Tertiary Sisters was a very important expression of their prophetic dynamism, but it’s not only this, of course, nor, the last one. China – a missionary adventure.

Not many years have passed, and the Father Founder himself opened wide this door to his daughters. The Lord sent him a sign and he, a man of faith, knew how to interpret it at once. In 1903, without anyone knowing anything, a young Colombian lady, a person of good position arrived in Masamagrell.  She needed to escape from home for the call of the Lord to be a Capuchin Tertiary Sister. This fact, together with the request that the Capuchins of Guajira had been making to the sisters to go there, was enough for the Congregation, encouraged by its Founder, to decide to travel different parts of the world, announcing Christ where He was not yet known. In 1905, the first missionaries left for Colombia. Years later, it was Venezuela’s turn. And in 1929 the Capuchin Tertiary Sisters began their missionary opening to China. The circumstances of this new trip gave it the characteristics of a true adventure. The sisters, chosen among the volunteers, were, as Father Amigó wanted, «healthy and strong in body, constant and solid in faith», they had a great spirit of love, abnegation and sacrifice, but they were going to a country of which they did not know the idiosyncrasy, the culture and the language. On November 3, 1929, the first chosen ones left Masamagrell. They went to the poorest mission in China, located in the province of Kansu, the largest and westernmost of the country. As the missionaries of that time did, they bid farewell with a «see you in heaven«. Father Amigó, in his old age, could not hold back his tears. He knew he would never see them again. During the five years he lived he always had a special affection for his «chinitas». And when he received news from them when he was about to die, he still found the strength to applaud with feebleness and enthusiasm at the same time.

On January 27, 1949, the last Capuchin Tertiary Sisters missionaries in China were forced to leave the country. Their hearts, however, remained forever in that field of evangelization, witness of so many labors and joys. They did not shed their blood for Christ, but they suffered in their own flesh the consequences of a persecution unleashed once again against the Christian faith.

This defiance of dangers and difficulties, lived with radicality by the sisters during the cholera of 1885, during the Spanish war of 1936, or during the missionary adventure in China, has continued to emerge later when the gravity of the circumstances has required an extreme witness of love. The case of Armero (Colombia) is a good proof of this. Armero, founded in the Province of Tolima in 1895. The Capuchin Tertiary Sisters were neighbors of the town since 1956 when the bishop of Ibagué invited them to settle there on the sole condition that they were saints. In 1985, the Holy Family College had already reached its true maturity. Without excessively increasing the number of students, without losing the family atmosphere that characterized it from its beginnings, it had been extending its educational and evangelizing action beyond its classrooms, entering into the family environment of its students and inserting itself into the overall pastoral ministry of the Parish The sisters who ran the College had received that year 1985 with a special joy. It was the first centenary of the foundation of the Congregation. The people of Armero, like so many others around the world, were ready to joyfully join in the jubilee celebration of their beloved sisters. But shortly after the beginning of the year, dark omens began to hover over the population. The Nevado del Ruiz, the sleeping lion for a long time, began to show signs of wanting to wake up from its lethargy. And Armero, like other towns in the area, began to live a long nightmare. When in April, the Provincial Superior visited the sisters, the situation was already very worrying, the volcano was continually spewing ash that covered the houses and streets of the town with a gloomy layer and forced the inhabitants to protect themselves with handkerchiefs in their mouths when going outside. The Provincial, seeing the danger the sisters were in, asked them: «Do you know that you are in danger of death, what you are going to do?

The community, composed of Sisters Bertalina Marín Arboleda, Julia Alba Saldarriaga Ángel, Emma Jaramillo Zuluaga, Marleny Gómez Montoya and Nora Engrith Ramírez Salazar (novice), responded unanimously we will die with the people…. And if we are left alive, we will welcome in our house all those who have housing problems… this house is very big. The Sister Provincial, however, seeing the novice very weak, said to her: Norita, when you go on vacation, you will have to stay in Medellin, you look very pale. But the young woman insisted: Let me finish the year here. I am happy. I feel that the Lord is asking me to stay here. On November 13, at nightfall, disaster struck. The floodwaters from the sudden melting of the volcano’s continuous snows swept through the village. The next day, the radio and the press gave the news of the tragedy as follows: Armero is like a sea…. Armero has disappeared. Nothing is left of Armero. The houses are buried… Thousands and thousands of people have died under the mud. Two of the sisters, the superior Bertalina and the novice Nora Engrith, were buried forever in the great cemetery that Armero has become. A third, Julia Alba, died thirteen days later in Bogota, victim of the wounds and suffering caused by the avalanche. As in 1885, the year of the foundation of the Congregation, also now, in the celebration of the first Centenary, three sisters sealed with their blood their testimony of love for God in their brothers and sisters. But the case of Armero is not the last testimony of love to the extreme that the recent history of the Capuchin Tertiary sisters offers us. Two years had not yet passed since that catastrophe, when the Congregation was “marked red” once again in the person of Sister Inés Arango, born in Medellín (Colombia). Her great ideal, since she was a child, was to be a missionary in Africa or Asia. She would have liked to leave for the missions as soon as she was professed, but her time had not yet arrived on God’s clock. She would have to wait twenty years and spend her first period of religious life dedicated to teaching in her native country. In 1977 her missionary dream finally came true. The Capuchin Tertiary Sisters had accepted a missionary work in the jungle of Aguarico (Ecuador) and Sister Inés was among the group of foundresses. It was March 9, 1977. Her first destination was Shushufindí. Shortly after, in August of the same year, Inés was in charge of a mission in Rocafuerte, which from then on would be for her the referential center of all her missionary activity in the surrounding indigenous tribes. Here she met the Capuchin Father Alejandro Labaka, with whom she felt identified from the first moment and with whom she had a deep and sincere friendship. Both of them preferred the minorities: the Sionas, the Secoyas, the Quichuas, the Shuaras and, particularly, the Huaorani. Alejandro and Agnes, in their dream of proclaiming Christ, demanded more and more of each other. They are aware that a true proclamation of the Gospel must respect the indigenous culture by assuming its values. And to know these values, it is necessary to be fully inserted in their life. In 1985, Sister Inés asked and obtained permission to go and live for a while among the Huaorani. The experience was very positive and Inés repeated it on other occasions. Every day her missionary spirit is stronger and more committed. She is living a spiritual maturity that amazes those who know her. In 1987 the III Latin American Missionary Congress took place in Bogota. After the Congress, Inés quickly returned to Rocafuerte, comforted by the words of encouragement and the blessing of the Superior General, Sr. Ma. Elena Echavarren. She has obtained permission and is eager to set out as soon as possible on a journey to the Tagaeri, the last unexplored redoubt of the Huaorani. On the eve of the trip, she said goodbye: Laura, I am leaving for the Tagaeri. Laura asks her: «Are you afraid, what if they kill you? -Ah, don’t worry, I’ll die happy. -Really, Inés, aren’t you afraid? No, because if I die, I die as the Lord asks me to die. In her letter she wrote: «If I die, I die happy, and I hope no one knows anything about me, I’m not looking for a name or fame, God knows…» Always with everyone, Inés.

Undoubtedly, within the history of martyrdom the best crown for Rosario, Serafina and Francisca, our blessed martyrs is and will be, without a doubt, to feel and be surrounded by the sisters who in Masamagrell and Benaguacil preceded them in 1885 with their testimony of love and by those others who, later, in China, Armero and Aguarico have contributed to make the history of the Capuchin Tertiary Sisters a poem of strength and tenderness, bringing to life the motto of: Love, Abnegation and Sacrifice.

Sr. Sylvia Yolanda Muñoz Muñoz, tc

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From ecclesial assembly to synodality

We live the now of God, the renewed action of a Church that has wanted to undertake new horizons with the always inspiring presence of the Ruah.

Today, more than ever, the road makes sense, when we discover (as we travel), its aroma, the movements of the trees, the singing of the birds, the whispering of the wind and, in front of us, we outline the horizon.  From my own way of thinking, this is how I want to express what this step and relationship of our Latin American and Caribbean Church has meant, between the First Ecclesial Assembly and the Synodality.  A whole process of encounters, welcoming, dialogues, listening, which, like the traveler, is amazed by the novelty that he discovers at every step, with the utopia of being able to feel the horizon.

And it is precisely since the preferential option of CELAM to consider the invitation of Pope Francis to assume an Ecclesial Assembly and not an Episcopal Conference, our horizon has been drawn with the clarity of Synodality, which continues to lead us to discover new shines of renewed ecclesiality.

Continuing our journey, and with the Synodal light, the process has led us to deepen in several aspects:

– Deep discernment of the call to Pastoral Conversion.

– A greater understanding of the ecclesiological category of PEOPLE OF GOD.

– Realization of the implications of CO-RESPONSIBILITY in mission.

– The creation of the CONCENSUS, as an essential element of healthy participation.

We place our pastoral renewal, under the intercession of Our Lady of Guadalupe, so that «together, we remain tuned into the one heart of the Church, which is love».

SOURCE: asambleaeclesial.lat

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Advent 2022

Advent is the first period of the Christian liturgical year, which consists of a time of preparation for the birth of Christ. Its duration can vary from 21 to 28 days, given that it is celebrated on the four Sundays preceding the feast of Christmas. The faithful consider it a time of reflection and forgiveness.

The term advent comes from the Latin «adventus», which means coming. Advent is a time of joy and thanksgiving for the coming of Our Lord Jesus Christ. It is a feast that was added late after Easter in the liturgical calendar. These four weeks leading up to Christmas are an opportunity to prepare in hope and repentance for the coming of the Lord. This year 2022 Advent begins on Sunday, November 27 and ends on December 18.

Origin of Advent

Before Christ, the Hebrew people were a very suffering people. Small and defenseless in the midst of great nations, they were often enslaved, deported, invaded, and deprived. The only thing that sustained them was their religion and, as a religious truth, their hope for the Promised One by their prophets: the Messiah.

A few in Israel, who are usually called «the remnant», had a spiritual vision of the Messiah who was to come, and they sensed a Kingdom of peace, love and justice. To them belonged those who, moved by the Spirit, recognized in Jesus the Savior Messiah.

A good practice in Advent is to light in our homes and parishes the Advent Wreath and through the 4 Lights that will bring us closer to the mystery of Christmas, prepare our hearts to actualize the presence of that Messiah longed for in all times of human history.

To know its significance go to:  https://www.aciprensa.com/recursos/la-corona-de-adviento-1748

SOURCE: Aciprensa

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Dealing with the challenges of peace like St. Francis, the progress and creation (Pope Francis)

Taking as a starting point the figure of the Poverello of Assisi, whom Franciscan Orders, congregations and families will celebrate with a series of initiatives from 2023 to 2026, the 800th anniversary of his death, Francis points to him as an example of «a man of peace and poverty, who loves and celebrates creation».

Looking precisely to the Poverello of Assisi, the Pontiff stressed that the centenary should tend to «decline together the imitation of Christ and love for the poor.» Because «Francis lived the imitation of the poor Christ and love for the poor in an inseparable way, as two sides of the same coin». The fruits of the celebrations will mature «also thanks to the atmosphere that emanates from the different Franciscan ‘places'», the Pontiff pointed out, because each of them «possesses a particular character, a fruitful gift that contributes to renewing the face of the Church».

The stages of the VIII Franciscan Centenary

The Franciscan itinerary planned for the eighth Franciscan centenary, which will last from 2023 to 2026, will have as its first stop in Fonte Colombo, near Rieti, because it was there that Francis wrote the Rule, later approved by Pope Honorius III in 1223, but also to remember the place of the first manger in history, Pope Francis recalled.

Another stop will be in La Verna, the place where, in 1224, Francis received the stigmata. The place, the Pope explained, «represents ‘the last seal’ – as Dante says (Paradiso, XI, 107) – which makes the saint assimilated to the crucified Christ and capable of penetrating the interior of human history, radically marked by pain and suffering.» Finally, in 2026 they will come to Assisi to commemorate the Transitus of Francis, in 1226, at the Porziuncola: an event that reveals the essence of Christianity, the Pontiff clarifies, which is «the hope of eternal life». And it is not by chance, Francis observes, that the tomb of the Saint, located in the Lower Basilica, has become over time «the magnet, the beating heart of Assisi.»

Source: Vatican News