Forwarded from Catholics IRL🇻🇦
PAKISTANI CANDIDATE FOR SAINTHOOD
Servant of God Akash Bashir
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Today is the death anniversary of the Servant of God Akash Bashir. He was a Pakistani layperson, the first native of his country to be called “Servant of God” as a purported martyr. He served as a volunteer security guard of a Church. One day, a suicide bomber attempted to enter the Church. “I will die but I will not let you go in,” he told the terrorist. The attacker set off a bomb, immediately killing himself and Bashir. He was only 20.
Servant of God Akash Bashir
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Today is the death anniversary of the Servant of God Akash Bashir. He was a Pakistani layperson, the first native of his country to be called “Servant of God” as a purported martyr. He served as a volunteer security guard of a Church. One day, a suicide bomber attempted to enter the Church. “I will die but I will not let you go in,” he told the terrorist. The attacker set off a bomb, immediately killing himself and Bashir. He was only 20.
Forwarded from Catholics IRL🇻🇦
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Tucker Carlson says that despite the fact he is not Catholic he thinks the Sacrament of Confession is the “coolest thing they do.”
Forwarded from 𝐆𝐞𝐨𝐫𝐠𝐢𝐮𝐬
Advises for Great Lent from the Univ Lavra Greek Catholic Elder Oleksandr
"During Lent, all our prayers tell how much God has loved man. And if we want to deny ourselves something, we do it in this spirit: Lord, You love me so much, so I also want to make at least this small renunciation to show You how much I love You. And then we will grow in love for God. The most important thing is to be in love in everything. Let everything serve to grow in love: when we eat, let our hearts be filled with love for God, because it is His love that gives us all this. And if we decide to give up something, let us do it out of love for God and for our neighbors (to sacrifice it for someone or something). We will be judged by the movement in which we did (everything). In the movement of love (in the Holy Spirit), or in the passionate movement...".
"During Lent, all our prayers tell how much God has loved man. And if we want to deny ourselves something, we do it in this spirit: Lord, You love me so much, so I also want to make at least this small renunciation to show You how much I love You. And then we will grow in love for God. The most important thing is to be in love in everything. Let everything serve to grow in love: when we eat, let our hearts be filled with love for God, because it is His love that gives us all this. And if we decide to give up something, let us do it out of love for God and for our neighbors (to sacrifice it for someone or something). We will be judged by the movement in which we did (everything). In the movement of love (in the Holy Spirit), or in the passionate movement...".
Btw I’ve now officially gone through the entire Bible and I gotta say I cannot find one single fault, contradiction or blemish. 10/10, would recommend both as a work of literature and as divinely inspired truth.
Big shoutout to Fr Mike Schmitz and the 10,000 miles on my car and my solitary job for making it possible
Big shoutout to Fr Mike Schmitz and the 10,000 miles on my car and my solitary job for making it possible
Forwarded from ✨ Catholic M8s ✨
☘️ Happy Saint Patrick’s Day! ☘️
Today we celebrate St. Patrick, the beloved patron saint of Ireland, whose life was a powerful witness to faith, courage, and the love of Christ.
Captured by pirates and brought to Ireland as a slave, St. Patrick turned to God in his suffering. After escaping, he returned years later as a missionary, bringing the Gospel to the very people who once enslaved him. His deep faith, tireless preaching, and love for the Irish people helped to spread Christianity across the land.
St. Patrick is famously known for using the shamrock to explain the Holy Trinity — one plant with three leaves, a simple yet powerful reminder of the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit.
On this day, let’s ask for St. Patrick’s intercession:
Prayer to St. Patrick
Dear St. Patrick,
You brought the light of Christ to a land in darkness. Inspire us to be bold in our faith, sharing the Good News with love and courage. Pray for us, that we may trust in God’s plan for our lives, just as you did.
St. Patrick, pray for us!
May the blessing of the Lord be upon you today and always.
“Christ with me, Christ before me, Christ behind me, Christ in me.” — St. Patrick’s Breastplate
Today we celebrate St. Patrick, the beloved patron saint of Ireland, whose life was a powerful witness to faith, courage, and the love of Christ.
Captured by pirates and brought to Ireland as a slave, St. Patrick turned to God in his suffering. After escaping, he returned years later as a missionary, bringing the Gospel to the very people who once enslaved him. His deep faith, tireless preaching, and love for the Irish people helped to spread Christianity across the land.
St. Patrick is famously known for using the shamrock to explain the Holy Trinity — one plant with three leaves, a simple yet powerful reminder of the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit.
On this day, let’s ask for St. Patrick’s intercession:
Prayer to St. Patrick
Dear St. Patrick,
You brought the light of Christ to a land in darkness. Inspire us to be bold in our faith, sharing the Good News with love and courage. Pray for us, that we may trust in God’s plan for our lives, just as you did.
St. Patrick, pray for us!
May the blessing of the Lord be upon you today and always.
“Christ with me, Christ before me, Christ behind me, Christ in me.” — St. Patrick’s Breastplate
For those who were waiting on my long ago exposition on the theology of the body and human sexuality I accidentally did it in replying to somebody saying “Sex is not a blessing, children are”
❤1
Forwarded from Socrates
Another person has commented from the catechism so the matter is put to bed however I would just contribute and expound upon the topic. By your logic, men would be talking turkey blasters and women merely incubators. This would obviously be an affront to human dignity and would be utterly usurious. The conjugal act is the way we create children, but physical union is the blessing, in a very real way children are the byproduct. Sexual union is the completion of the covenant of marriage, without it the marriage is not actually finalised. Sex is - and it is not blasphemy to say - the the spouses equivalent of the Eucharist. It is the spouses saying with their actions, quite literally, “This is my body, which will be given unto you”. If there were ever to be an 8th sacrament, it would be sexual union since, it is an outward sign of the inward grace of marriage itself; you enter into each other, you become one body as you are one soul, one mind. It’s really quite a beautiful thing which predates sin, remember how when Adam wakes up and see Eve he says “Bone of my bones, flesh of my flesh”, the Hebrew language does not have superlative words like greatest, biggest, best, etc. The way you therefore express the magnitude of something being exalted above other things is with repeating the adjective “Holy, Holy, Holy” and also with affirming specifically their greatness over things “King of Kings, Lord of Lords”. Consider then, when Adam says “Bone of my bone, flesh of my flesh” he is not simply observing the origin of his new “helpmate” (a term which itself is almost always a title for God), it is a passionate and exuberant expression of joy and saying she is the best and most perfected version of him. I don’t think it’s anachronistic to say that when he says “Flesh of my flesh” he’s considering getting as close to her as possible (namely one flesh), especially considering they’re both naked anyway.
Consider this, and I bring it up since it was the the first reading of Mass today (when I wrote this days ago) and I feel like that is God trying to encourage me to write this since I have been considering how to reply for about days now since your (don’t take this the wrong way) missing the point cut me to heart, both as the romantic and as a Catholic. Now, the ancient way to enter a covenant in the Near East was to cut animals in half and to walk through the severed halves, essentially saying “If I go back on this covenant cut me in half”. God requests to Abraham - as we know - to enter the covenant by cutting a few species of animals in half. The notable thing about the way Abraham enters covenant with God is that God walks through the two halves of the animal, I doubt Moloch would do that, but I digress. Consider then - as a metaphor, two halves of flesh divided, which then is entered into to consecrate the covenant. My friend, that sexual union, I’m sure you’re familiar enough with the female anatomy that I don’t need to elaborate on the metaphor further.
Humour me - if you are still reading, which I doubt - and let me go further. There are in 3 dimensions to sex. The first, which is prized by the church is the expression of a “total giving of self”, the entering into each other and into covenant with each other, this is partially always present in sex behind the ramp at the skate park aged 15, with a woman you met a few hours ago on tinder, if you dubious, remeber that “he who is joined to a prostitute becomes one body with her? For, as it is written, ‘The two will become one flesh.’" (1 Corinthians 6:16). The marital act, with the sanctity of sex in tact with one’s wife is blessed, this leads on nicely to the 2nd dimension to the conjugal act; children. The conjugal act should - of course - always be open to life, children are used as a synonym for blessings multiple times throughout the Bible, but in couples who are sterile, sex is still permitted, if sex itself wasn’t a blessing in itself, the second your wife hits menopause the church would forbid the conjugal act.
Consider this, and I bring it up since it was the the first reading of Mass today (when I wrote this days ago) and I feel like that is God trying to encourage me to write this since I have been considering how to reply for about days now since your (don’t take this the wrong way) missing the point cut me to heart, both as the romantic and as a Catholic. Now, the ancient way to enter a covenant in the Near East was to cut animals in half and to walk through the severed halves, essentially saying “If I go back on this covenant cut me in half”. God requests to Abraham - as we know - to enter the covenant by cutting a few species of animals in half. The notable thing about the way Abraham enters covenant with God is that God walks through the two halves of the animal, I doubt Moloch would do that, but I digress. Consider then - as a metaphor, two halves of flesh divided, which then is entered into to consecrate the covenant. My friend, that sexual union, I’m sure you’re familiar enough with the female anatomy that I don’t need to elaborate on the metaphor further.
Humour me - if you are still reading, which I doubt - and let me go further. There are in 3 dimensions to sex. The first, which is prized by the church is the expression of a “total giving of self”, the entering into each other and into covenant with each other, this is partially always present in sex behind the ramp at the skate park aged 15, with a woman you met a few hours ago on tinder, if you dubious, remeber that “he who is joined to a prostitute becomes one body with her? For, as it is written, ‘The two will become one flesh.’" (1 Corinthians 6:16). The marital act, with the sanctity of sex in tact with one’s wife is blessed, this leads on nicely to the 2nd dimension to the conjugal act; children. The conjugal act should - of course - always be open to life, children are used as a synonym for blessings multiple times throughout the Bible, but in couples who are sterile, sex is still permitted, if sex itself wasn’t a blessing in itself, the second your wife hits menopause the church would forbid the conjugal act.
❤1
Forwarded from Socrates
The third - which is the one misappropriated most reprehensible by the modern world which (understandably) makes a pious person reactionary and then become somewhat puritan - is that sex is fun and enjoyable. There is a reason why “satisfaction” is a synonym for orgasm.
Any of these taken alone could lead to sin or misappropriation/misunderstanding the act, many plentifully - often degenerate - sexually active people do not actually understand the unitive act. However, the conjugal act should be all 3. Proper sexual unification recognises of the sacrality and seriousness of the act, it is open to the blessing of children - lest there not be a “Total gift of oneself” - and out of a spirit of love and respect, it is contrived in the ways known only to the couple and God to be as scintillating and enjoyable for each person, (((within reason))).
Sex is beautiful, get you a wife (if it’s your vocation) and enjoy her humanity and perfect your own. God bless fren
Any of these taken alone could lead to sin or misappropriation/misunderstanding the act, many plentifully - often degenerate - sexually active people do not actually understand the unitive act. However, the conjugal act should be all 3. Proper sexual unification recognises of the sacrality and seriousness of the act, it is open to the blessing of children - lest there not be a “Total gift of oneself” - and out of a spirit of love and respect, it is contrived in the ways known only to the couple and God to be as scintillating and enjoyable for each person, (((within reason))).
Sex is beautiful, get you a wife (if it’s your vocation) and enjoy her humanity and perfect your own. God bless fren
❤1
Socrates
The third - which is the one misappropriated most reprehensible by the modern world which (understandably) makes a pious person reactionary and then become somewhat puritan - is that sex is fun and enjoyable. There is a reason why “satisfaction” is a synonym…
God bless, absolutely magnificent post!!
Forwarded from °CATHOLIC FEMININITY°
°St Joseph, Patron Saint of Fathers
Pray for us°
Pray for us°