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During this Year For Priests we join in prayer for our beloved priests who bring the Sacrament of His Body and Blood to us. And, we pray that the Blessed Mother wrap her mantle around our priests and through her intercession strengthen them for their ministry.
The priest has the key of the heavenly treasures; it is he who opens the door; he is the steward of the good God, the distributor of His wealth. -The Cure of Ars, St. John Vianney
St. John Mary Vianney, pray for us and all our priests!
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Our Mothers Garden of Sorrow |
The Loss of Jesus in the Temple |
Luke 2:41-50
And his parents went every year to Jerusalem, at the solemn day of the pasch, And when he was twelve years old, they going up into Jerusalem, according to the custom of the feast, And having fulfilled the days, when they returned, the child Jesus remained in Jerusalem; and his parents knew it not. And thinking that he was in the company, they came a day's journey, and sought him among their kinsfolks and acquaintance. And not finding him, they returned into Jerusalem, seeking him. And it came to pass, that, after three days, they found him in the temple, sitting in the midst of the doctors, hearing them, and asking them questions. And all that heard him were astonished at his wisdom and his answers. And seeing him, they wondered. And his mother said to him: Son, why hast thou done so to us? behold thy father and I have sought thee sorrowing. And he said to them: How is it that you sought me? did you not know, that I must be about my father's business? And they understood not the word that he spoke unto them.
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Miscarriage
Karen and Elizabeth
Karen's Fiat
You said that we would have a child
So I, with love, welcomed new life
and smiled with each wave and sea
of morning sickness,
caught up in this miracle-to-be.
"For You, Lord," I said,
and offered each tiny suffering
as a gift to Thee,
incomparable to the gift of life
You were giving to me.
And so I reeled, stunned and shaken,
at my baby's death.
I was forsaken.
Anger rose and built a case
against misinterpreted signs of Grace.
I was so wrong –
"Here is a child," You said,
or so I thought.
But my arms are empty, bereft.
There is nothing left of my trust when I listen for Your Voice.
How can I trust when I was so wrong?
How will I again be strong?
I quiet myself and turn to You,
O Ancient Beauty ever new...
I ask You, my truest and deepest Love,
for an answer, some comfort, a sign from above.
There is silence, and my tears...
tears of a mother's grieving love.
Then, in Your Kindness, Your encompassing Love,
You embrace me and speak:
the words from above
flow through an earthen vessel.
A man of God who listens to me,
and tells me I can --
I must -- dare trust,
for all is as it should be.
The mystery that is my child
is in Your Hands,
Your Sacred Heart.
The part I play is to surrender and be free.
When next I quiet myself to pray,
"My Grace is sufficient for you," You say,
"For My power is made perfect in weakness."
The words play again and again in my mind,
like a record left to skip...
they rip into the core of my grief
and leave me no choice but to drop to my knees
and offer You my child.
Oh, heal my heart, Lord, bitter and spent,
Be perfect in my weakness,
my Pearl of great price.
Though I offer it, Lord, imperfectly and poorly,
my life is Yours. Let Your Grace suffice.
Elizabeth's Reflection:
There is an appointed time for everything...a time to be born, and a time to die. I pondered this scripture as I drove home alone from the midwife’s office that Wednesday morning. What was supposed to be my first ultrasonic peek at our new baby had ended with grim news and blood tests and sympathetic hugs. Our baby was gone, well before I had a chance to hold her in my arms.
For weeks previous to this day, I had been preparing for a time to be born, not my own labor and delivery but that of a sweet 17-year-old friend. Emily was to deliver her baby any minute and I had promised to be her labor coach. Now, I would fulfill that promise within hours of learning of my baby’s death. I asked the Blessed Mother for just one night, to gather myself together, before I was to support Emily.
That night was granted. The next morning Emily’s mom called me to go with them to the hospital. All the way there, I prayed for strength, I prayed for the grace to be truly supportive and loving for Emily. I prayed I wouldn’t cry. It was a perfect day. Emily was strong and brave and beautiful. She gave birth to a lovely, healthy baby girl. I will forever be grateful for the blessing of being there. I stayed long enough to tell Emily what a wonderful thing she had done and then I slipped out into the night. I climbed into our van, 12 hours after I had arrived, and sobbed all the way home.
I moved mechanically through the next few days, waiting for my body to acknowledge that my baby had died and to let go of being pregnant. It was only when I went to visit Emily that I was able to crawl outside my sadness and marvel anew at the wonder of life. Grace was tangible in those visits. I told Emily how on May 6, 1990, an oncologist told me I’d never have another baby. Then, two years later, on May 6, my second son was born. God made certain that I knew that He could bring great good out of a bad situation. Emily wondered aloud at the timing. She had been in early labor for weeks. Her baby, now named Mary Grace, was born May 6, 2004. God could have chosen any day. But He chose the day which will forever be a day of great good and renewed hope for both of us.
I struggled to make sense of my loss. The next week found me in a cold surgical suite, sobbing a final goodbye. I offered the day for Emily as she sat at home, agonizing over whether to keep her baby. The next few days were painful ones for both of us. Then, it was the weekend and I found myself in a pew at a little country church witnessing my daughter’s First Reconciliation. I cried my way through my own confession.
The next day dawned gray and gloomy. My dear little daughter dressed excitedly for her First Communion. My eyes were swollen. My head hurt. The only prayer left in me was "Just please don’t let me cry anymore." As we walked to church, the sun broke through the clouds. Mary Beth shone with joy. During Mass, I sat with my toddler on my lap, my daughter on one side and my husband on the other. My entire family stretched down the pew.
The sense of being alone was overwhelming. "Where are you in all of this, God? I have surrendered a baby to heaven; I have helped to bring a baby into this world; I’ve brought this darling child to your altar to receive your Presence. Why can I not feel you here?" Like so many times before when I was in pain, I had the crushing fear of being abandoned by my Heavenly Father.
My eyes wandered around the church to all the friends who had walked this journey with Mary Beth, some of them since her baptism. They were the same people who had consoled me in the past week. I was desperate to find an answer to the growing panic that I was alone. Out of the corner of my eye, I saw Emily’s father. He smiled at me. In a flood of emotion, I remembered a conversation we had had a few days earlier, sitting in the hallway of the labor and delivery ward.
Emily’s father is a big, strong man. He was a Secret Service agent for the President. He’s one tough guy. He looked at me the morning of his granddaughter’s birth with tears in his eyes. "I want you to know I will do anything, anything for Emily and that baby. I love them both so much, I’d give my very life for them." And he meant it. In the days of Emily’s agonizing decision, it was her father who took control. Firmly, compassionately, he crafted a family plan that protected the lives of the precious children he held so dear — his daughter and his granddaughter. We all breathed a collective sigh of relief when he exerted his paternal authority with wisdom and gentleness.
Here it was, the answer to my own prayer. God showed me how a human father can protect and love all life unconditionally, how a human father can be big enough, strong enough, courageous enough, gentle enough, wise enough to bring great good out of a bad situation. I knew that there is just one Father who is all of these things all the time. God didn’t want this pain for me. He wants life. Even as Emily’s father wants nothing but good for her, the author and creator of life wants all that is good for me.
He is holding my baby in heaven. He is holding Emily’s baby here on earth. He is holding Emily. And He is holding me.
A Miscarriage Prayer by Mother M. Angelica
My Lord, the baby is dead!
Why, my Lord—dare I ask why? It will not hear the whisper of the wind or see the beauty of its parents’ face—it will not see the beauty of Your creation or the flame of a sunrise. Why, my Lord?
“Why, My child—do you ask ‘why’? Well, I will tell you why.
You see, the child lives. Instead of the wind he hears the sound of angels singing before My throne. Instead of the beauty that passes he sees everlasting Beauty—he sees My face. He was created and lived a short time so the image of his parents imprinted on his face may stand before Me as their personal intercessor. He knows secrets of heaven unknown to men on earth. He laughs with a special joy that only the innocent possess. My ways are not the ways of man. I create for My Kingdom and each creature fills a place in that Kingdom that could not be filled by another. He was created for My joy and his parents’ merits. He has never seen pain or sin. He has never felt hunger or pain. I breathed a soul into a seed, made it grow and called it forth.”
I am humbled before you, my Lord, for questioning Your wisdom, goodness, and love. I speak as a fool—forgive me. I acknowledge Your sovereign rights over life and death. I thank You for the life that began for so short a time to enjoy so long an Eternity.
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Infertility
Jenn
When Rachel saw that she bore Jacob no children . . . . [s]he said to Jacob, ‘Give me children, or else I will die.’ Genesis 30:1.
Late winter and early spring are emotionally painful for me to bear at times, because they bring bittersweet memories. I have had three pregnancies, only one full term. But each pregnancy started near the beginning of Lent, during which the weather usually bears the last of winter's fury and the struggle of spring to dominate. In February 2003 I had my first pregnancy, after struggling and praying for 3 years and in September we were blessed with a beautiful boy. Two years ago in early April we experienced a miscarriage at 8 weeks. Last year on March 2nd I had emergency laparoscopic surgery because it was suspected I had an ectopic pregnancy. It wasn't, thank God, but it was another baby we lost.
We would love to have God bless us with another child. We are praying so hard for another child including a 54 Day Rosary Novena. Without becoming obsessive, I am trying to do natural helps to increase our chances to becoming pregnant. Ultimately I know it is in God's hands. We ask for a baby, but always with the words "if it is God's will." But in my heart, I must be like a little child, because I still "expect miracles", and I'm not always accepting God's will for us.
Each month I have so much hope. I mentally calculate the due date if we conceive this month, look ahead the next three months to see what events might be hard when suffering morning sickness. There is so much anticipation. Without explanation, my 3 year-old son is suddenly asking about "our baby" and wanting to buy and make things for "our baby."
Then nearing the end of the two-week wait I try to decide if it would be emotionally easier to take a pregnancy test or to wait for my cycle to begin. Usually I decide to take the pregnancy test. And....
Negative.
Again.
And I cry. Not just little tears, but deep, full-body sobs.
I don't give up. I try another test the next day...sometimes three days. After all, I tell myself irrationally, it could be too early. It could be a bad test. I could have done it improperly. But all the tests are negative. And I cry more. And it's not until after the horrific cramping and period comes that I truly can tell myself that this month's chances are over. What provides some healing is looking forward to the next month of another hope. But each month gets harder for me. I just turned 40. I've only seen 3 positive tests in my life. My chances are getting slimmer.
After struggling to conceive our first child, I now find myself facing secondary infertility. With it comes the same pain, but also new burdens.
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A large family gives an immediate witness to being open to life. Our small family doesn’t “look” open to life. I really dislike how having an only child looks like we are buying into modern society's of controlling family size through birth control and other immoral means.
Gatherings with large Catholic families are sometimes uncomfortable, as I feel we don't fit. Perhaps no one is judging me, but I feel like I'm being frowned upon by others. And we are often excluded, because, after all, we only have one. It's not intended on hurting me, but people don't want to "inflict" their large numbers on my single one. It's silly, but it hurts that no one seeks motherly advice or experience of someone who is raising only one child. And while it is always joyful to hear of other families' blessings of new life and to hold and caress those little babies, it is so hard to come home and and feel my aching empty arms and see an unfilled cradle.
Many people view our pain as useless waste of time. After all, there are so many medical procedures that could be done to make a baby, why not use the gift of science? It's so hard for others to understand that there are only moral ways to conceive a child. We have had to form our consciences by what the Catholic Church teaches and make our choices (and in our case, the sacrifices). The decision wasn't easy. We tried simple medical, moral means to help boost my fertility, and even in the small ways means playing with female hormones. That alone is physically and emotionally hard to bear. But now even that doesn't work. I have unexplained infertility, and we have to leave it in God's hands.
I don't have to suffer this all alone. My husband and I have discussed and prayed and cried together about all this. We have tried to be each other's support through this pain and darkness, for it is OUR cross, not just mine alone. My husband loves me for who I am, and not mad at my failure to produce multiple children. And God has also blessed me by sending friends along my path who have been or are experiencing similar situations and have shared their experience and have comforted me. I have to remind myself to look at the blessings God has sent me. I have a wonderful husband and a son. There are others who have not been able to have even one child. So, instead of feeling sorry for myself, I need to enjoy life with our little family, and relish every moment with them.
But some days are harder to bear than others. In my self-pity and disappointment, I turn to heaven, shake my fist, and ask "Why God? Why aren't you answering my prayers??" In my anger I sometimes think why would God do this to us, we who are trying to be faithful? We deserve another child! But the Church in her maternal care gives a gentle reminder that "A child is not something owed to one, but is a gift." (CCC 2378) . And I know He is answering my prayers. In His most beautiful, bountiful, providential love He answers my prayers. It's just not the answer *I* wanted. I have to take baby steps, each day approach God with confidence that He will give the grace to handle the day, minute by minute.
My daily prayer is Fiat. I'm praying to accept God's will. At the Annunciation Mary accepts to bear a Son, even though she had planned on remaining single and chaste her entire life. God had a different plan, and I ask for the graces to accept His plan for us, like Mary did.
In all things, may the most just, the most lovable, and the most high Will of God be done, be fulfilled, be praised and exalted in all things forever.
Your will be done, O Lord, Your will be done.
The Lord has given, the Lord has taken away, blessed be the name of the Lord. Amen.
I pray like a little child. I want another baby, but I need to see that God has answered my prayers, and in His Fatherly care He has a reason. So my prayer today is asking for another baby...and peace of soul and comfort of my aching heart in accepting God's will when the answer is no.
Prayer In the Face of Fertility Challenges by Jennifer Saake
Lord, help me to know that You are enough. Take my eyes off of myself. Take my eyes off of the child I desire. Help me to delight myself in You. Mold the desires of my heart to be in line with Your will. I don't want to need to be a mother more than I need to be your humble, obedient child. I don't want wanting to have a baby to be a stumbling block between You and me anymore.
Lord, I want to give this desire, this drive, this ache up to You. Help me not to snatch it back as I so often do with the burdens I place in Your hands. Help me to be truly content with Your will and Your timing.
Lord, You know that I still desire a baby - someone to mold, teach, train, shape, guide, and help to grow in You. But until the day You give me that joyous blessing, help me to grow in You. Let me reach out to those around me. Let me witness and minister to the children You place in my path.
Lord, if adoption is the path You would have us take, prepare our hearts, and prepare the child who will share our home. If adoption is not Your will for our lives, keep me from pushing ahead of Your plan. Help me to stay submitted to my husband's will, and to Your will. If we are headed in the wrong direction, change our hearts.
Thank You for lifting my burden. Help me to keep You first! Let me seek Your face daily, and let me know that You are enough!
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