Saturday, March 29, 2025

Laetare Sunday rejoice and rocking the rose

 

Rejoice, Jerusalem: Laetare Sunday is Catholicism’s Best-Kept Little Secret

‘Rejoice with Jerusalem; be glad for her, all you that love this city! Rejoice with her now, all you that have mourned for her! You will enjoy her prosperity, like a child at its mother’s breast.’ (Isaiah 66:10-11)





Angelo Stagnaro

Laetare Jerusalem et conventum facite omnes qui diligitis eam; gaudete cum laetitia, qui in tristitia fuistis, ut exsultetis et satiemini ab uberibus consolationis vestrae. Psalm: Laetatus sum in his quae dicta sunt mihi: in domum Domini ibimus.

Most Catholics knows about the Third Sunday of Advent, also known as Gaudete Sunday — the day in which our excitement for the coming of the Lord is heightened because the Church assures us that it will soon be upon us.

Less known is Laetare Sunday, the Fourth Sunday of Lent.

Both days refer to happiness. In fact, the word laetare means “rejoice” in Latin. Gaudete means “joyful.” The connection is obvious as they are both days of joyous anticipation in the midst of what might seem like darkness. In fact, Easter is exactly 21 days from Laetare Sunday.

I’ve given up meat this Lent. A few years ago, I gave up chocolate. My family still refers to that as my annus horribilis (Latin: “the miserable year”) due to the untold, galactic-scale human suffering I unintentionally afflicted upon them due to the absence of chocolate in my life — ora pro nobis. The upside to my self-imposed suffering is that I’m pretty sure I’ve shaved off about 50 years of Purgatory due my sacrifice.

Fortunately or unfortunately, my family was able to take away about 1,000 years — give or take a decade — off any future stint in Purgatory for putting up with me and my chocolate-free misery.

And, you’re welcome.

The Church is so committed to both Advent’s Gaudete Sunday and to Lent’s Laetare Sunday, and seeks to impress and inspire joyful hope in the faithful during both fasting, vigilant periods, that she direct our priests to wear rose-colored vestments and festoon our churches accordingly.

It’s not easy to do, but only a real man can pull off pink.

Again, you’re welcome.

In both Lent and Advent, the color is a glimpse of the joy that awaits us at Christ’s coming — both in his birth and in his re-birth (i.e., Resurrection). Laetare Sunday signifies a temporary abeyance to our self-imposed penitential observations. There was a time when marriages during Lent could only be celebrated on this one day.

Laetare Sunday is meant as a joyous day despite the darkness of Lent. In fact, the French Canadian tradition known as Mi-Carême(i.e., Mid-Lent,) was a day Catholics would dress up in costumes and go from house-to-house singing and dancing for treats like a cross between Halloween and Christmas.

Traditionally, Catholics celebrated Laetare Sunday by visiting the church in which they were baptized, from which sprang the alternative moniker, “Mothering Sunday.” The day was also called “Five Loaves Sunday,” referring to the multiplication of the fish and loaves, because the Gospel reading had been reserved for this date prior to the use of contemporary lectionaries. Interestingly, Notre Dame University announces the recipient of its Laetare Medal on this day. Hopefully, I won’t be passed over yet again this year.

Historically, the Church had celebrated this day by handing out blessed golden roses to Catholic monarchs around the world, hence the name, Dominica de Rosa. Not coincidently, the word rosa means “pink” in Italian. Liturgically, rose describes a lighter shade of the color violet, thus signifying a relaxation of the Lenten rules.

The entrance antiphon this Sunday is a reference to Isaiah 66:10-11:

Rejoice with Jerusalem; be glad for her, all you [who] love this city! Rejoice with her now, all you [who] have mourned for her! You will enjoy her prosperity, like a child at its mother’s breast.

The word laetare is taken from the incipit for the Gregorian chant introit for the Latin Mass used on this day.

Laetare Sunday is meant to direct Catholics to “keep your eyes on the prize” in anticipation of Easter. We don’t suffer the deprivations of not eating chocolate just for some masochistic reason. Instead, our suffering unites us with Christ and, as Paul points out:

And now I am happy about my sufferings for you, for by means of my physical sufferings I am helping to complete what still remains of Christ’s sufferings on behalf of his body, the church. And I have been made a servant of the church by God, who gave me this task to perform for your good. It is the task of fully proclaiming his message, which is the secret he hid through all past ages from all human beings but has now revealed to his people. (Colossians 1:24-26)

Once Easter arrives after an arduous Passion Week, we celebrate Christ’s Resurrection for 50 days. We fast and then we feast. If not, we lose the meaning of both. As Scriptures teach us, I wait eagerly for the Lord’s help, and in his word I trust (Psalm 130:5).

Celebrate Laetare Sunday keeping in mind Christ’s Resurrection, which the Jewish Patriarchs anticipated and hoped for. For us, it is at last in sight, for we are an Easter people!

Sunday Saint of the Day

 

St. John Climacus






Abbot of Sinai, so called “Climacus” from the title of his famous book, The Climax, or The Ladder of Perfection; also known as John Scholasticus. He was a Syrian or a Palestinian who started his eremitical life at sixteen, living for many years as a hermit on Sinai. He then went to Thale. Revered also as a scriptural scholar, he authored The Ladder of Perfection to provide a comprehensive treatise on the ideal of Christian perfection and the virtues and vices of the monastic life. Composed in thirty chapters, it was intended to correspond to the age of Christ at the time of his baptism by John the Baptist. John was elected abbot of the monks of Mt. Sinai at the age of seventy He died there on March 30.

Pope seeks closer relationship with Orthodox in Albania

 

His Beatitude Joan, Archbishop of Tirana, Durrës, and All AlbaniaHis Beatitude Joan, Archbishop of Tirana, Durrës, and All Albania 

Pope Francis hopes for closer ties with Orthodox Church of Albania

As His Beatitude Joan is enthroned as the Archbishop of Tirana, Durrës, and All Albania, Pope Francis expresses his hopes for renewed commitment to deepening relations between the Catholic Church and the Autocephalous Orthodox Church of Albania.

By Devin Watkins

The Holy See sent a delegation to the enthronement of His Beatitude Joan as Archbishop of Tirana, Durrës, and All Albania, which took place in Tirana on Saturday.

Archbishop Flavio Pace, Secretary of the Dicastery for Promoting Christian Unity led the delegation, accompanied by Msgr. Andrea Palmieri, Undersecretary of the same Dicastery, and Msgr. Ionuţ Paul Strejac, Chargé d’Affaires ad interim of the Apostolic Nunciature in Tirana.

Pope Francis sent a letter to Archbishop Joan to extend his “fraternal greetings in the love of Christ.”

“In expressing my spiritual closeness,” wrote the Pope, “I assure you of my prayers that God the Father, source of all good, will grant you the abundant gifts of the Holy Spirit as you guide the flock entrusted to your care.”

He recalled Archbishop Joan’s predecessor, His Beatitude Anastas, whose apostolic zeal “left a deep and lasting legacy on Albania.”

“Anastas distinguished himself by his commitment to the peaceful coexistence of men and women belonging to different Churches and religious traditions,” said the Pope, “and he contributed significantly to the improvement of relations between our Churches.”

Pope Francis went on to invite Archbishop Joan to continue to foster dialogue as a way to overcome divisions and seek full communion among Christians.

“In these difficult times marked by war and violence,” he said, “it is ever more urgent that Christians bear credible witness to unity, so that the world may fully embrace the Gospel message of fraternal solidarity and peace.”

The Pope noted that Christians bear responsibility for showing the world the “real communion, if alas not yet complete, that already unites us.”

“It is my heartfelt hope,” wrote Pope Francis, “that under your paternal guidance, relations between the Church of Albania and the Catholic Church will develop further, seeking new forms of fruitful cooperation in proclaiming the Gospel, serving those most in need and renewing our commitment to resolving the issues that still separate us through the dialogue of charity and truth.”

In conclusion, the Pope assured Archbishop Joan of his prayers for his ministry and extended to him “a fraternal embrace in Christ our Lord.”

Jubilee 2025: Jubilee for Missionaries of Mercy

 

Missionaries of Mercy make their pilgrimage in the Vatican Gardens for their JubileeMissionaries of Mercy make their pilgrimage in the Vatican Gardens for their Jubilee 

Pope: Missionaries of Mercy bear witness to fatherly love of God

Pope Francis sends a message to Missionaries of Mercy gathered in Rome for their Jubilee, and recalls that God wipes our tears through conversion and forgiveness.

By Devin Watkins

As Missionaries of Mercy hold their 2025 Jubilee in Rome, Pope Francis has reaffirmed his prayerful support for their mission to bring God’s forgiveness to our broken world.

In a message released on Saturday, the Pope expressed his “gratitude and encouragement” for their work as confessors.

During the 2016 Extraordinary Jubilee of Mercy, Pope Francis commissioned priests from dioceses around the globe to hear confessions and grant absolution for several sins which are normally reserved to the Holy See.

As they return to Rome, the Holy Father said Missionaries of Mercy offer people enduring the weight of sin the gift of God’s forgiveness, calling it a source of hope.

“Through your service,” he said, “you bear witness to the paternal face of God, infinitely great in love, who calls everyone to conversion and constantly renews us with His forgiveness.”

Pope Francis said Jesus opens the path in every sinner’s heart to walk with the Church toward reconciliation.

“Conversion and forgiveness are the two caresses with which the Lord wipes every tear from our eyes,” he said. “They are the hands with which the Church embraces us sinners; they are the feet on which we walk in our earthly pilgrimage.”

The Pope encouraged Missionaries of Mercy to be “attentive in listening, ready in welcoming, and steadfast in accompanying those who desire to renew their lives and return to the Lord.”

God’s mercy, he added, changes our hearts and can reach us in every situation, since we can always trust in God.

“I wholeheartedly bless your apostolate, asking Mary Immaculate to watch over you as Mother of Mercy,” he concluded. “Please, do not forget to pray for me.”

Friday, March 28, 2025

Saturday Saint of the Day

 

St. Ludolf of Ratzeburg





Ludolf was a Norbertine priest (a canon regular of the Premonstratensian Order). In 1236 he was chosen to become bishop of the German see of Ratzeburg. While fulfilling his episcopal duties, he continued the practices of his Norbertine religious life. For his courageous defense of the Church, he was imprisoned and harshly treated by Duke Albrecht of Saxony-Lauenburg. Subsequently he fell ill and died from what he had suffered. A soldier tormented by excruciating pains in his head resulting from an arrowhead that had become embedded in his flesh during battle invoked the intercession of Saint Ludolf. Soon afterward, he found that the arrowhead had shifted to the surface of his head wound, so that he was able to extricate it with his hand. In thanksgiving to God, the Blessed Virgin Mary, and Saint Ludolf, the soldier donated to the Church a lavishly decorated missal and several beautifully adorned liturgical vestments.

Holy week Schedule released by Vatican; unlikely Pope Francis will preside

 

Vatican publishes Holy Week schedule without clarifying whether Pope Francis will preside


Pope Francis presides at Palm Sunday Mass at the Vatican on March 24, 2024. | Credit: Vatican Media


Victoria Cardiel

The Vatican has published the official calendar of liturgical celebrations planned for Holy Week, but it has not clarified whether Pope Francis will preside.

The pontiff was discharged on Sunday after spending 38 days in the hospital with double pneumonia, but doctors have prescribed complete rest for at least two months. It is expected that he will be able to resume his full schedule by the end of May.

The Holy See Press Office indicated that it will be necessary to monitor “the improvement of the pope’s health in the coming weeks to assess his possible presence, and under what conditions, at the Holy Week rites.”

Archbishop Diego Ravelli, papal master of ceremonies, announced the planned Holy Week schedule, which will begin on Palm Sunday, April 13, with Mass in St. Peter’s Square at 10 a.m. local time, commemorating Jesus’ triumphant entry into Jerusalem.


On Thursday, April 17, the chrism Mass is scheduled in St. Peter’s Basilica at 9:30 a.m., during which the holy oils will be blessed and priests will renew their priestly vows. In previous years, Pope Francis has traveled from the Vatican to a prison in Rome to commemorate the Lord’s Supper, in remembrance of the Last Supper and the institution of the Eucharist, during which he would wash the feet of 12 people.

The following day, Good Friday, the Catholic Church celebrates the passion of the Lord in St. Peter’s Basilica at 5 p.m. In previous years, Pope Francis has participated in the services at St. Peter’s Basilica, but the homily has typically been given by the preacher of the papal household, currently Franciscan Capuchin Father Roberto Pasolini. This is the only day of the year on which there is no consecration as a sign of mourning for the passion of Jesus.

At 9:15 p.m., the traditional Way of the Cross will take place in Rome’s Colosseum, where the 14 stations of the Passion are meditated upon, from Jesus’ condemnation to death to his burial, in one of the most widely followed ceremonies by the faithful in Rome. Last year, the Holy Father, suffering from bronchitis, was unable to attend this event, whose tradition reflects the persecution suffered by early Christians under the Roman Empire.

On Holy Saturday, April 19, the Easter Vigil will be celebrated in St. Peter’s Basilica. In the past, St. John Paul II usually celebrated the Easter Vigil on Holy Saturday in the Vatican around 10 p.m., but in the final years of his pontificate, it began to be celebrated a few hours earlier. This year, the ceremony will begin at 7:30 p.m. in the atrium of St. Peter’s Basilica with the brief ceremony of lighting the fire and blessing the paschal candle.

The following day, Easter Sunday, April 20, the Catholic Church will celebrate the day of the Lord’s resurrection with a Mass in St. Peter’s Square at 10:30 a.m. Following this, the solemn urbi et orbi blessing will be imparted to the city of Rome and the entire world.

One week after Easter, on the second Sunday of Easter or Divine Mercy Sunday, a special Mass will be celebrated in St. Peter’s Square at 10:30 a.m. During this ceremony, the canonization of Blessed Carlo Acutis, the young Italian millennial known as the “cyber apostle of the Eucharist,” is scheduled to take place.

New Archbishop of Galveston-Houston installed to replace Cardinal DiNardo

 New archbishop pledges to serve Galveston-Houston Archdiocese ‘with all my heart’

 3 minutes ago

HOUSTON (OSV News) — The new shepherd of the Archdiocese of Galveston-Houston pledged March 25 to serve his new flock “with all my heart.”

“Together, we will move forward, following our Savior, who leads, protects and watches over this local church,” Archbishop Joe S. Vásquez shared in his heartfelt homily, partly delivered in Spanish, at his installation Mass on the feast of the Annunciation at the Co-Cathedral of the Sacred Heart in downtown Houston.

“Mary has accompanied me in my vocation, and I trust that she will be with me throughout these years as I continue to lead you,” he said. “I also entrust myself to St. Joseph, to help me shepherd you. Pray for me, that, despite my unworthiness, I may be faithful to the great trust that has been handed on to me.”

‘Christ’s Loving Presence’

He added, “Pray that I may become like Jesus Christ, the good shepherd and great high priest, the teacher and servant of all, and so become more and more a sign of Christ’s loving presence among you.”

Thousands of the faithful from Texas and beyond gathered for the Mass. The congregation included three cardinals, numerous bishops, hundreds of priests and other clergy, men and women religious, and laity.

Under the depiction of the Holy Spirit in the co-cathedral’s soaring dome, Cardinal Christophe Pierre, the apostolic nuncio, witnessed Cardinal Daniel N. DiNardo hand over the crozier to Archbishop Vásquez, who, seated upon his cathedra, assumed his role as  Galveston-Houston’s ninth bishop and third archbishop. 

Archbishop Vásquez, 67, succeeds Cardinal DiNardo, 75, who headed the Texas archdiocese from 2006 until the pope accepted his resignation Jan. 20 and named then-Bishop Vásquez of Austin as his successor.

Episcopal Motto ‘Sigueme’

Of Mexican American descent, the archbishop is one of 26 active Hispanic Catholic bishops in the U.S. His episcopal motto is “Sigueme,” Spanish for “Follow me,” in reference to Jesus’ words to Peter in the Gospel of St. John.

In a message posted on the archdiocesan website the day of his installation, Archbishop Vásquez said he was “profoundly grateful” Pope Francis for appointing him as the next Archbishop of Galveston-Houston, reaffirming his “fidelity” to the pontiff.

He also expressed deep appreciation to his predecessors, Cardinal DiNardo and the late Archbishop Joseph A. Fiorenza, who ordained him as a priest for the Diocese of San Angelo in 1984 and as an auxiliary bishop for Galveston-Houston in 2001. “He was truly a spiritual father to me and continues to be a source of inspiration,” he said.

He called Cardinal DiNardo “a true shepherd” who has provided “this local church with wise leadership and excellent service. … I hold him in the highest esteem and will depend on his counsel to help me serve the people of this vibrant and growing Church.”

Growing in ‘Faith and Love’

“I look forward to working with the many dedicated priests, deacons, consecrated men and women and lay faithful in this Archdiocese,” he continued. “You are a church rich in diversity, goodness and generosity, and I look forward to meeting with you and listening to you as together we grow in our faith and love for Our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ.”

He thanked the people of the Austin Diocese “for the prayers, love and support they have shown in allowing me to serve there for nearly 15 years. I will always have them in my heart.” Pope Benedict appointed him Austin’s fifth bishop Jan. 26, 2010.

Archbishop Vásquez remarked that he is “humbled” to serve the Archdiocese of Galveston-Houston and entrusted himself “to the tender embrace of Our Lady of Guadalupe and to the compassionate protection of St. Joseph,” a sentiment he echoed in his homily.

He said he would serve “the needs of this local church to the best of my ability.” “Your love and your prayers are greatly needed and appreciated,” he added.

Pope Francis offers prayers and condolences for victims of the earthquake that struck Myanmar and Thailand

 

A resident carries belongings over debris next to a damaged building in Naypyidaw on March 28, 2025, after an earthquake in central MyanmarA resident carries belongings over debris next to a damaged building in Naypyidaw on March 28, 2025, after an earthquake in central Myanmar  (AFP or licensors)

Pope prays for victims of earthquake in Southeast Asia

Pope Francis has expressed his closeness and prayers for the people of Myanmar and Thailand struck by a devastating earthquake, as the scale of the damage is assessed and the death toll rises.

By Francesca Merlo

Pope Francis has expressed his closeness to the populations of Myanmar and Thailand, struck by a 7.7-magnitude earthquake on Friday. In a telegram sent on Friday, the Pope expressed his sorrow at the loss of life and widespread devastation.

The Pope offered heartfelt prayers for the souls of the deceased and assured his spiritual closeness to all affected by this tragedy.

His thoughts also went to all emergency personnel, whom, he prayed, "may be sustained in their care of the injured and displaced by the divine gifts of fortitude and perseverance."

Dire humanitarian needs

Aid agencies are struggling to assess the devastating humanitarian needs. Measuring 7.7 on the Richter scale, the quake struck around noon local time (06:00 GMT), with four smaller aftershocks, ranging from 4.5 to 6.6 in magnitude, following closely behind.

The situation remains dire, with the full extent of the damage still unclear. Myanmar, under the control of a military junta, has long suffered from challenging communication and information access.

While the death toll has not yet been confirmed, rescue workers in the country have described the damage as “enormous,” citing that casualties would most likely be in the hundreds.

A major hospital in Naypyidaw has been declared a “mass casualty area,” with hundreds of wounded people being treated outside the building. Myanmar's government has said that blood is in high demand in the hardest-hit areas.


In response to the disaster, a state of emergency has been declared in six regions. Disturbing images from the area are filling the web, showing severe damage to buildings and infrastructure, including a video capturing the collapse of a large bridge. The exact reach of the quake’s impact remains uncertain, but it is clear that the humanitarian toll is substantial.

Consequences in Thailand

The tremors were also felt in neighbouring Thailand. In Bangkok, three construction workers were killed, and dozens more were injured when an unfinished high-rise building collapsed.

Thailand’s Deputy Prime Minister announced that 81 people are trapped under the rubble. Bangkok, too, has been declared a disaster area.

An already unstable situation

The crisis comes at a time when Myanmar is already grappling with widespread displacement, with over three million people internally displaced and more than a third of the population in need of urgent humanitarian assistance.

The earthquake’s epicentre lies in central Myanmar, a region deeply entrenched in ongoing conflict. The added strain of the quake will make the delivery of aid even more complicated.

According to Chinese media reports, the earthquakes were also felt in the Yunnan and Sichuan provinces, causing injuries and damage to houses in the city of Ruili on the border with northern Myanmar. Cambodia, Bangladesh, and India also reported tremors.

Prayers as the tragedy unfolds

As prayers begin to come in from Pope Francis and the faithful all over the world, the international community watches closely as the news unfolds. Local and humanitarian efforts are working as best as possible to minimise the scale of the tragedy and save as many lives as possible.

Thursday, March 27, 2025

Saint of the Day for Friday

 

St. Venturino of Bergamo



 

Dominican preacher and missionary crusader. A native of Bergamo, Italy, he joined the Dominicans in 1319 and soon distinguished himself as a brilliant preacher, attracting huge crowds throughout northern Italy. Pleased with his ability to reach large numbers of believers, he announced in 1335 his intention to go on a pilgrimage to Rome. When Pope Benedict XII (r. 1334-1342) learned of the pilgrimage, he feared Venturino might be planning to crown himself pope, and so forbade the friar to proceed. This decree was joined by one issued by the Dominicans themselves at the Chapter in London (1335). Ignorant of these bans, Venturino proceeded to Rome and then to Avignon where he was arrested and imprisoned until 1343. He is also known for helping to organize a crusade, at the behest of Pope Clement VI (r. 1342-1352), against the Turks who were then menacing Europe.