- An Open Letter to the Bishops, by Fr. Hans Kung. April 16, 2010. Kung, with all his characteristic pomposity, admonishes the Catholic bishops on what they ought to do in the wake of the abuse crisis.
- An Open Letter to Hans Kung, by George Weigel. April 21, 2010. A smashing rebuttal from the papal biographer.
- Despite media smears, world and faithful have warmed to Benedict. April 19, 2010. A response from D. Vincent Twomey, a former student of Professor Ratzinger, currently professor emeritus of moral theology at St Patrick’s College, Maynooth, and author of the excellent Pope Benedict XVI: The Conscience of Our Age
(San Francisco: Ignatius Press, 2007).
- Via Carl Olson, Hans Urs von Balthasar "on the withdrawal of Hans Kung's authorization to teach Communio: International Catholic Review 7, no. 1 (Spring 1980)("It is amazing that the Roman and German authorities have had that much patience with him").
Monday, April 26, 2010
Kung vs. Benedict; Weigel vs. Kung
Monday, April 19, 2010
Celebrating the 5th Anniversary of Pope Benedict XVI's Pontificate
- Acton President Rev. Robert A. Sirico and Kishore Jayabalan, the Director of Acton’s Rome office on the pontificate of Pope Benedict XVI -- a dicussion with Al Kresta on Kresta in the Afternoon.
- Pope Benedict's Rookie Year as a Priest - Before he was Pope Benedict XVI, or Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger, our new pope was a young Bavarian seminarian. In his autobiography,
Milestones: Memoirs 1927-1977,
Joseph Ratzinger recounts his ordination on the Feast of Saints Peter and Paul in Freising, Germany, in 1951, and his first years as a parish priest and then completing his doctorate while teaching at the seminary.
- From Catholic News Service: After having collaborated on children’s books about Pope Benedict XVI, Msgr. Georg Ganswein — his personal secretary — is celebrating the fifth anniversary of the pope’s election with his own book, “Benedict XVI: Urbi et Orbi” looking at the pope’s public encounters with the faithful and with other visitors in Rome and around the world.
According to the Salt + Light blog, the book is released in Italian and German only:
As Msgr. Gänswein says in his introduction to the book, in Mark’s Gospel Jesus tells the apostles to go to every corner of the earth to preach the Gospel, and so the successor of Peter has to do the same in order to bring “the words of eternal life” to the ends of the earth.
The photos are beautiful shots of Pope Benedict in different places, including a great photo of him walking hand-in-hand with a select group of young people at World Youth Day in Cologne, Germany. There’s even a picture of the Holy Father meeting Governor General Michaëlle Jean and her daughter Marie-Eden.
- At the five-year mark, "two key objectives of Pope Benedict XVI's pontificate have come into clear focus: creating space for religion in the public sphere and space for God in private lives", says John Thavis (Catholic News Service).
- The first Latin high mass in decades was celebrated at the high alter of the National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception on April 24, in honor of the fifth anniversary of the papacy of Pope Benedict XVI -- with more than 3,5000 attending.
Here is the complete text of the homily by Bishop Edward Slattery of Tulsa OK; also, Fr. John Zuhlsdorf posts reactions to the pontifical mass in Washington, which was for some participants their first experience of such.
- Close to 1,200 students from Roman universities signed a letter congratulating Benedict XVI for the fifth anniversary of his election to the See of Peter. (Zenit News Service).
- Benedict has already left its mark on the Church, says Carmen Elena Villa, in a survey of highlights of his pontificate to date, not to mention significant facts (with 142 published works, he holds the papal record for having written most books before taking the Chair of Peter).
- "Reigniting the Word of God" (National Catholic Register April 21, 2010). According to biblical scholar Scott Hahn, emblematic to Benedict's pontificate is the centrality on the word of God:
That’s where he has kept our focus — not on fads or scandals or the world’s alarms. Christ, the Word Incarnate, is the solution to every world crisis. Pope Benedict has invited us, insistently and consistently, to encounter Christ in the word inspired, the sacred Scriptures. And he has done this through some very large labors. ...
- To commemorate the fifth anniversary of this historic event for the Catholic Church, Catholic World Report asked its contributors to reflect on these first years of Pope Benedict's pontificate:
Priest, Prophet, King
Three ways Benedict has exemplified these three roles
By Father Joseph Fessio, S.J.Reform within Continuity
A proper understanding of Vatican II has been paramount in Benedict’s pontificate.
By Father Matthew LambWhy Do the Media Rage?
Pope Benedict’s pontificate has caught the media and dissidents alike by surprise.
By Philip F. LawlerPope Benedict’s Patristic Perspective
A student of the past, a prophet of the future
By Father David Vincent Meconi, S.J.Planting the Seeds of Reform
Future generations will have much for which to thank Benedict.
By George NeumayrBenedict Contra Mundum
In Pope Benedict, “Peter is still here.”
By Carl E. OlsonA Pope Who Thinks in Centuries
Benedict sees the Church as a divine institution with a historical mission.
By Tracey RowlandA Fatherly Figure
History will vindicate the paternal care Benedict has shown for the Church.
By Robert RoyalPope Ratzinger
A scholarly pope who also listens
By Father James V. Schall, S.J.Retrieval and Reintegration
Benedict’s efforts to let the past inform and guide the Church’s future
By Father Robert Sirico
Get to know Pope Benedict XVI ...
![]() |
The Essential Pope Benedict XVI Edited by John F. Thornton & Susan B. Varenne, with introduction by D. Vincent Twomey, S.V.D. On April 24, 2005, Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger became Pope Benedict XVI, the successor of the Apostle Peter and the spiritual leader of more than one billion Roman Catholics. This collection lays out Benedict's thinking and relates it to a variety of contemporary issues, including modern culture's abandonment of traditional religious values, social mores regarding conception and the sanctity of life, current challenges to the priesthood, and the Catholic Church's relations with other world religions. |
![]() |
Benedict XVI: An Intimate Portrait In the person of Benedict XVI, the Church has a Pope who is one of the most significant of Europe's intellectuals. The journalist Peter Seewald, who has known Ratzinger since 1992, conducted the longest interviews in Church history with him for two books which were best-sellers world-wide, Salt of the Earth, and God and the World. Now, for the first time, Seewald describes these intensive encounters in detail, and draws a portrait of this brilliant theologian who has put his life entirely at the service of the Catholic Church. This book is also the story of a long dialogue that changed Seewald's life. Many people are trying to understand who Benedict XVI really is. On one point they all agree: in the person of Joseph Ratzinger, the chair of Peter is occupied by one of the most brilliant minds in the world. Peter Seewald's portrait of Benedict recounts details about the personality and life of Benedict that were hitherto completely unknown.' |
![]() |
Pope Benedict XVI: The Conscience of Our Age Fr. D. Vincent Twomey, a former doctoral student of Joseph Ratzinger and long time friend of the Pope, felt the need to respond to the common question he heard often after the papal election, “What kind of person is the new Pope?” So often Twomey had read false depictions of both the man and his thought, especially the image presented by the media as a grim enforcer. Twomey offers here a unique double–presentation of the man, Pope Benedict XVI — a “theological portrait” that encompasses both an overview of the writings, teachings and thought of the brilliant theologian and spiritual writer, as well as the man himself, and his personality traits and how he communicates with others. Twomey shows that the secret to the serene dignified behavior of Benedict is that he is open to beauty as much as truth, that he lives outside himself, and is not preoccupied with his own self. He also is a man that Twomey says “has the courage to be imperfect”, showing he has a deep humility and strives for teaching the truth even when misunderstood or not presented as well as he would like. |
Saturday, April 17, 2010
Pope Benedict's Apostolic Journey to Malta
From the Vatican
Schedule of Events / Prepared Texts by Pope Benedict
- Welcoming ceremony at the International Airport of Malta (Luqa, 17 April 2010)
- Visit to the Cave of St. Paul (Rabat, 17 April 2010)
- Holy Mass at the Floriana Granaries (Floriana, 18 April 2010)
- Regina Caeli (Floriana, 18 April 2010)
- Press Release: meeting of the Pope with a group of persons who were sexually abused (Apostolic Nunciature in Malta, 18 April 2010)
- Meeting with young people at the Great Port of Valletta (Valletta, 18 April 2010)
- Farewell ceremony at the International Airport of Malta (Luqa, 18 April 2010)
- Times of Malta: Papal Visit Headlines Daily comprehensive coverage (down to the minutest details) of the papal visit.
- Times of Malta: Streaming Media Gallery
- Catholic Herald: Pope Benedict XVI's Apostolic Visit to Malta (UK)
- Apostolic Journey to Malta: Full Coverage from Salt + Light Television
- Apostolic Journeys of Pope Benedict XVI: Malta as chronicled by the Pope Benedict Forum.
From John Allen, Jr. (National Catholic Reporter)
- For Benedict, Malta was a break in the storm April 19, 2010.
- Benedict's strategy on crisis: 'Pastoral not Political' April 18, 2010.
- Victim in Malta: Pope had 'tears in his eyes' April 18, 2010.
- Pope meets abuse victims in Malta April 18, 2010.
- Pope delivers strong plea to resist secularism April 18, 2010.
- Vatican strategy in Malta: 'Let Benedict be Benedict' April 18, 2010.
- Crisis hangs over pope in Malta like volcanic ash April 17, 2010.
- Pope keeps focus on Malta's past, present -- not his own April 17, 2010.
- Malta president upstages pope on crisis April 17, 2010.
- Pope in Malta: Church 'wounded by our sins' April 17, 2010.
- Facing stormy seas, pope heads to Malta to recall a shipwreck April 16, 2010.
From Anna Arco (Catholic Herald)
- Called to a vocation of love and service April 18, 2010.
- Pope Benedict meets Maltese abuse victims April 18, 2010.
- Malta diary: Awaiting Pope Benedict April 17, 2010.
- “People do not love God, because they do not know God”, on Malta's Saint George Preca. April 16, 2010.
Zenit News Service (coverage by Serena Sartini)
- Pontiff says Malta Trip was a Consolation, Praises a Culture Built on Catholicism April 21, 2010.
- Pope Benedict on the trip to Malta: "The Plan of the Love of God Is Even Greater Than the Storms" April 21, 2010.
- Malta Trip "Better than Expected", Half the Population Saw the Pope April 19, 2010.
- Maltese President's Farewell to Pope: "Hope Has Been Renewed in Us and We Have Been Strengthened" April 18, 2010.
- Pontiff's Parting Address to Malta: "Be Proud of Your Christian Vocation" April 18, 2010.
- Benedict XVI's Words to Maltese Youth: "Do Not Be Afraid to Be Intimate Friends of Christ" April 18, 2010.
- Benedict XVI Meets with Abuse Victims, Says Church Is Working to Investigate, Bring Justice April 18, 2010.
- Pope reveals Malta's Greatest Treasure, Urges Maltese to Preserve Gift of Faith April 18, 2010.
- Oor Lady of Ta' Pinu: "Pray to Her Under the Title Queen of the Family" April 18, 2010.
- Papal Homily at Granaries Square: "Many Voices Try to Persuade Us to Put Aside Our Faith in God" April 18, 2010.
- Pope to Malta: Keep Alive the Gift of Faith; Prays at Grotto of St. Paul in Rabat April 17, 2010.
- Air Malta: Pope Will Return to Rome Sunday: Dashes Hopes of Maltese Prime Minister April 17, 2010.
- Maltese President's Welcome to Pontiff "We Still Cherish a Code of Values, Nourished by Our Faith" April 17, 2010.
- Pontiff Arrives in Malta As a Pilgrim: Notes Role of Providence in St. Paul's Shipwreck April 17, 2010.
- Life, St. Paul, Malta: Nation's Prime Minister Comments on Papal Visit April 17, 2010.
- Benedict XVI: God Loves This Church, Says Its Gospel Is Strength That Heals April 17, 2010.
- Pope's Comments En Route to Malta: "Even ... Wounded by Our Sins, The Lord Still Loves This Church" April 17, 2010.
- Benedict XVI's Words at Grotto of St. Paul: "Take Up the Exciting Challenge of the New Evangelization" April 17, 2010.
- Maltese Have Great Respect for Pope, Says Prelate, Encourages Reflection on "Why" of St. Paul's Shipwreck April 16, 2010.
- Papal Address Upon Arriving in Malta: "Serve As a Bridge of Understanding" April 17, 2010.
- Malta Prelate Meets With Abuse Victims; Papal Meeting Still Possible, Though Unlikely April 16, 2010.
- Organizing a Papal Trip: Interview With Malta Official, Charles Bonello April 16, 2010.
- Boat Ride to Give Pontiff View of Malta, by Serena Sartini. April 15, 2010.
- A New Beginning for Malta: Interview with Nuncio Archbishop Tommaso Caputo April 15, 2010.
- Barhopping With the Archbishop of Malta April 15, 2010.
- Pontiff Could Receive Abuse Victims in Malta April 13, 2010.
- Pontiff Looks Forward to Malta Visit, Invokes Prayers of St. George Preca April 12, 2010.
Friday, April 16, 2010
Tuesday, April 06, 2010
Scandal-Free Pope Benedict Roundup!
- The Catholic Herald's Michael White takes us behind the scenes of a papal concert and hails the Pope's efforts to raise musical standards at the Vatican:
This Pope is deeply musical and always has been - with conservative tastes (Mozart, Haydn, Bach) that are nonetheless expressed in surprisingly heartfelt terms. Stefan von Kempis, a senior figure in Vatican Radio, recalls a time when John Paul II was Pope and Benedict (then Cardinal Ratzinger) organised a Vatican performance of Beethoven's Ninth to mark some special occasion.
"This was when he was at the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith," says von Kempis, "and his reputation was very much a hard-liner: the clenched fist behind a charismatic Pontiff. Not so many people knew about his love for music. So when he got up and made an insightful as well as emotionally committed speech introducing the symphony, people were taken aback that he could be so sensitive. So engaging.
"Most certainly he loves to talk music and to play it, which he does a lot. One of the cardinals here, Cardinal Kaspar, used to be his Vatican room-neighbour and says proudly that every day he heard the piano coming through the wall and never complained. This is Christian spirit because one has to admit of the Holy Father that he doesn't play so well. His brother always says he's 'not too bad but still an amateur'. Perhaps you've seen the YouTube clip?"
There is indeed a YouTube clip of Benedict playing the piano - shakily, and with mistakes so bad he has to stop and start again. It's quite endearing. And especially endearing given all the papal history that lies behind it. ...
- Catholic News Service' John Thavis renders his appraisal of Pope Benedict's pontificate as it nears its five year mark, citing "two key objectives" of the Holy Father: creating space for religion in the public sphere and space for God in private lives.
- "The Political Side of Benedict XVI" - Father John Flynn, LC reviews The Social and Political Thought of Benedict XVI
by Thomas R. Rourke, which analyzes the Pope's record on such matters before and after his election to the Chair of Peter.
- Pope Benedict XVI will waive his own rules by beatifying Cardinal John Henry Newman himself during his four-day visit to England and Scotland this September (Catholic Herald March 19, 2010). The announcement of Pope Benedict's decision to beatify Cardinal Newman himself was welcomed by Father Richard Duffield, provost of the Birmingham Oratory:
"The Holy Father's lifelong devotion to Newman has made a profound contribution to understanding the depth and significance of our founder's legacy," he said in a March 16 statement. "His decision to beatify Newman in person confers a unique blessing upon the English oratories and all who have drawn inspiration from Newman's life and work."
- Apropos of the United State's recent debate and legislation on health care reform, here is Pope Benedict XVI on (HT: Fr. Jeffrey Steele):
Love—caritas—will always prove necessary, even in the most just society. There is no ordering of the State so just that it can eliminate the need for a service of love. Whoever wants to eliminate love is preparing to eliminate man as such. There will always be suffering which cries out for consolation and help. There will always be loneliness. There will always be situations of material need where help in the form of concrete love of neighbour is indispensable. The State which would provide everything, absorbing everything into itself, would ultimately become a mere bureaucracy incapable of guaranteeing the very thing which the suffering person—every person—needs: namely, loving personal concern. We do not need a State which regulates and controls everything, but a State which, in accordance with the principle of subsidiarity, generously acknowledges and supports initiatives arising from the different social forces and combines spontaneity with closeness to those in need. The Church is one of those living forces: she is alive with the love enkindled by the Spirit of Christ. This love does not simply offer people material help, but refreshment and care for their souls, something which often is even more necessary than material support. In the end, the claim that just social structures would make works of charity superfluous masks a materialist conception of man: the mistaken notion that man can live “by bread alone” (Mt 4:4; cf. Dt 8:3)—a conviction that demeans man and ultimately disregards all that is specifically human. [Deus Caritas Est]
- On March 16, the bishops of England and Wales released a joint statement on Pope Benedict's visit to England and Scotland. (Further info can be found at thepapalvisit.org.uk).
- "Come All Ye Faithful" - William S. Lind accesses Pope Benedict's "counter-Reformation" (The American Conservative February 1, 2010):
From the abandonment of Thomas Cranmer’s Book of Common Prayer to the introduction of priestesses in the 1970s and the ongoing election of homosexual bishops, the Episcopal Church forsook traditional Christian doctrine in favor of its own invented religion. Not surprisingly, this apostasy fractured both the Episcopal Church and the larger Anglican Communion. The upshot has been a variety of continuing churches that maintain historic ties to Anglicanism, multiple movements within the Episcopal Church to restore orthodoxy, and the breaking away of many Anglican churches in the Third World, where most Anglicans now live.
On Oct. 20, Rome parachuted into this dogfight like a division of Fallschirmjager. In a move that stunned the Archbishop of Canterbury, Anglicanism’s titular leader, Pope Benedict XVI, opened the Roman Catholic Church’s door to Anglicans as Anglicans. He invited them to move in—individuals, parishes, whole dioceses—while retaining their Anglican identity. They could keep their Book of Common Prayer, their liturgies, their priests—even married ones.
On March 6, 2010, William Joseph Cardinal Levada, prefect of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, delivered an address at Queen's University in Kingston, Ontario, Canada. Titled, "Five Hundred Years After St. John Fisher: Pope Benedict's Initiatives Regarding the Anglican Communion," the address recounted the background to the Holy Father's recent Apostolic Constitution Anglicanorum coetibus and discussed hopes and prospects for uniting Anglican groups with the Catholic Church. In his talk, Levada reaffirmed that "union with the Catholic Church is the goal of ecumenism," properly understood. (HT: Rorate Caeli).
- Benedict XVI's unexpected acceptance of invitations to visit Barcelona and Santiago de Compostela in Spain this year reveals something about his goals, says Jesuit Father Federico Lombardi (Zenit).
- Celebrating mass at the San Giovanni della Croce in Colle Salario on March 7, 2010, Pope Benedict reminded parishioners that the laity are not merely "‘collaborators’ of the clergy, but rather truly ‘co-responsible’ for the being and action of the Church. (Full text here).
- The Pope has expressed his wish to spend his summer vacation resting and studying at Castel Gandolfo in July, declining an invitation to return to the Northern Italian Alps.
From the periodicals
- "A new page in the relationship between Jews and Christians" "It is not the first time that Benedict XVI has been a guest in a synagogue, but one cannot escape the fact that what happened on 17 January, in that small corner on the bank of the Tiber which houses a Jewish community bearer of a profound and considerable history is not simply a Roman happening." (30 Giorni "30 Days" January 2010).
- “I, a Jew, Explain the Pope’s Outstretched Hand”, by Joseph Weiler. (Traces No. 2, 2010 [Communion & Liberation] ). "One of the protagonists of the Jewish world discusses the bond with “our elder brothers,”explaining the wounds and the steps, such as the bishop who denied the reality of the Holocaust, the cause for beatification ofPius XII, John Paul’s apology, and the recent encounter with Benedict XVI. He speaks of a relationship that requires “time and patience” but offers many signs of hope, beginning with the Holy Father’s gestures."
On a lighter note
- Following the Palm Sunday celebration in St. Peter's Square, the Pope briefly donned a special 2011 World Youth Day Hat [video].
- College students from the University of Navarra in Spain have created a stop-motion film to answer one question: Who is Pope Benedict XVI?
Coming in May 2010
|
Church Fathers and Teachers: From Leo the Great to Peter Lombard Ignatius Press (May 10, 2010) After meditating on the Apostles and then on the Fathers of the early Church, as seen in his earlier works Jesus, the Apostles and the Early Church and Church Fathers, Pope Benedict XVI devoted his attention to the most influential Christian men from the fifth through the twelfth centuries.
In his first book, The Church Fathers, This book is a wonderful way to get to know these later Church Fathers and Teachers and the tremendous spiritually rich patrimony they have bequeathed to us. |
Support the Pope!
Dear Holy Father,
We, the undersigned, want you to know that you are not alone in your pledge to fight injustice and the ailments in the Church. We want you to know that we trust you in your role as the leader of the Church. We want you to know that we forgive the sins of other members of the Church as we are forgiven. We are praying for you; for your courage, conviction, perseverance, and resolve.
We love you Papa Benedicto XVI!
Pope Benedict XVI ~ Urbi et Orbi ~ Easter 2010

I bring you the Easter proclamation in these words of the Liturgy, which echo the ancient hymn of praise sung by the Israelites after crossing the Red Sea. It is recounted in the Book of Exodus (cf 15:19-21) that when they had crossed the sea on dry land, and saw the Egyptians submerged by the waters, Miriam, the sister of Moses and Aaron, and the other women sang and danced to this song of joy: “Sing to the Lord, for he has triumphed wonderfully: horse and rider he has thrown into the sea!” Christians throughout the world repeat this canticle at the Easter Vigil, and a special prayer explains its meaning; a prayer that now, in the full light of the resurrection, we joyfully make our own: “Father, even today we see the wonders of the miracles you worked long ago. You once saved a single nation from slavery, and now you offer that salvation to all through baptism. May the peoples of the world become true sons of Abraham and prove worthy of the heritage of Israel.”~ Pope Benedict XVIThe Gospel has revealed to us the fulfilment of the ancient figures: in his death and resurrection, Jesus Christ has freed us from the radical slavery of sin and opened for us the way towards the promised land, the Kingdom of God, the universal Kingdom of justice, love and peace. This “exodus” takes place first of all within man himself, and it consists in a new birth in the Holy Spirit, the effect of the baptism that Christ has given us in his Paschal Mystery. The old man yields his place to the new man; the old life is left behind, and a new life can begin (cf. Rom 6:4). But this spiritual “exodus” is the beginning of an integral liberation, capable of renewing us in every dimension – human, personal and social.
Yes, my brothers and sisters, Easter is the true salvation of humanity! If Christ – the Lamb of God – had not poured out his blood for us, we would be without hope, our destiny and the destiny of the whole world would inevitably be death. But Easter has reversed that trend: Christ’s resurrection is a new creation, like a graft that can regenerate the whole plant. It is an event that has profoundly changed the course of history, tipping the scales once and for all on the side of good, of life, of pardon. We are free, we are saved! Hence from deep within our hearts we cry out: “Let us sing to the Lord: glorious his triumph!”
The Christian people, having emerged from the waters of baptism, is sent out to the whole world to bear witness to this salvation, to bring to all people the fruit of Easter, which consists in a new life, freed from sin and restored to its original beauty, to its goodness and truth. Continually, in the course of two thousand years, Christians – especially saints – have made history fruitful with their lived experience of Easter. The Church is the people of the Exodus, because she constantly lives the Paschal Mystery and disseminates its renewing power in every time and place. In our days too, humanity needs an “exodus”, not just superficial adjustment, but a spiritual and moral conversion. It needs the salvation of the Gospel, so as to emerge from a profound crisis, one which requires deep change, beginning with consciences. [...]
Dear brothers and sisters, Easter does not work magic. Just as the Israelites found the desert awaiting them on the far side of the Red Sea, so the Church, after the resurrection, always finds history filled with joy and hope, grief and anguish. And yet, this history is changed, it is marked by a new and eternal covenant, it is truly open to the future. For this reason, saved by hope, let us continue our pilgrimage, bearing in our hearts the song that is ancient and yet ever new: “Let us sing to the Lord: glorious his triumph!”
"Urbi et Orbi"
-
Easter 2010
[English,
French,
German,
Italian,
Portuguese,
Spanish]
Knights of Columbus - A Novena for Pope Benedict XVI
Following is the text of the Novena:
Prayer for Pope Benedict XVIResources
Lord, source of eternal life and truth,
give to your shepherd, Benedict, a spirit
of courage and right judgment, a spirit
of knowledge and love. By governing
with fidelity those entrusted to his care,
may he, as successor to the Apostle
Peter and Vicar of Christ, build your
Church into a sacrament of unity, love
and peace for all the world. Amen.
V/ Let us pray for Benedict, the pope.
R/ May the Lord preserve him, give him a long life, make him blessed upon the earth, and not hand him over to the power of his enemies.
V/ May your hand be upon your holy servant.
R/ And upon your son, whom you have anointed.
Our Father… Hail Mary… Glory Be…
(HT: Salt & Light TV)
Friday, April 02, 2010


















