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Recent Posts by Jesse
HOW TO BECOME AN AUTHENICALLY CATHOLIC MAN
My main issue has been being a good father and husband. Unfortunately it’s taken me 60 years to realize my deficiencies. My wife has been helpful in pointing them out and explaining them to me. Would you...Read more
TO WHOM MIGHT WE APPEAL?
I have persevered in praying for our Pope, have been concerned with his ‘missteps’ pretty much since his election. What do we now do as Catholics to stop his continuing placement of people who promote evil into...Read more
Daily Reflections with
Archbishop Fulton Sheen
Below, you'll discover a daily reflection, taken from this incredible bishop.
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Mass in Dachau
A priest who was in the German prison camp Dachau describes the Mass after all the German guards were in bed. He said, “Our lives were in danger if we were ever discovered. A young priest had to memorize the names of all of those who had received communion, but it was forbidden for us to gather in groups for prayer. After night call and bed check, we would set our guards, darken the windows, and the lucky one to be chosen to celebrate for this momentous occasion would carefully brush his pathetic prison garb, put the stole over his shoulders, and by the small light of his smuggled candle begin the commemoration of that other great Passion of which our own was the physical continuation. We could understand the Mass. All that could crowd into the room were there, tears of joy running down our cheeks. Christ the Lord, who knew what suffering was, was coming to suffer with us, to bring us strength and consolation. The small hosts were broken into as many particles as possible so the greatest number could communicate. We had to keep a secret roster of those who received. We missed some of the liturgy perhaps, but I think that God looked down into that prison room and found a particularly refreshing response to His cry of love from the cross, ‘I thirst.’ There was nothing that could keep us from doing all in our power to be closer to God.”