Our Lady's Community of Lord's Praise Prayer Group

Our Lady's Community of Lord's Praise Prayer Group Our Lady's Community of the Lord's Praise Prayer Group is a group of Charismatic Catholics who meet weekly to praise and thank our Lord.

Our Lady's Community of the Lord's Praise prayer group meets weekly, Wednesdays, from 2 - 3:15 p.m. @ Holy Family Parish, Amherst, NS. We are affiliated with the Catholic Charismatic Renewal. We come together to give thanks and praise to God, Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. We sing, worship, pray for people's needs, share God's Word, and at 3 p,m, pray the Chaplet of Divine Mercy. All people are wel

come to come and join us. We also accept prayer requests and notes of thanksgiving to God for answered prayer.

05/07/2015

May the blessings of the Lord come upon you, your home, your family and all the persons you hold dear. St. Padre Pio

05/06/2015

May 6th, FEAST OF ST. DOMINIC SAVIO

So many holy persons seem to die young. Among them was Dominic Savio, the patron of choirboys.
Born into a peasant family at Riva, Italy, young Dominic joined St. John Bosco as a student at the Oratory in Turin at the age of 12. He impressed John with his desire to be a priest and to help him in his work with neglected boys. A peacemaker and an organizer, young Dominic founded a group he called the Company of the Immaculate Conception which, besides being devotional, aided John Bosco with the boys and with manual work. All the members save one, Dominic, would in 1859 join John in the beginnings of his Salesian congregation. By that time, Dominic had been called home to heaven.

As a youth, Dominic spent hours rapt in prayer. His raptures he called "my distractions." Even in play, he said that at times "It seems heaven is opening just above me. I am afraid I may say or do something that will make the other boys laugh." Dominic would say, "I can't do big things. But I want all I do, even the smallest thing, to be for the greater glory of God."

Dominic's health, always frail, led to lung problems and he was sent home to recuperate. As was the custom of the day, he was bled in the thought that this would help, but it only worsened his condition. He died on March 9, 1857, after receiving the Last Sacraments. St. John Bosco himself wrote the account of his life.

Some thought that Dominic was too young to be considered a saint. St. Pius X declared that just the opposite was true, and went ahead with his cause. Dominic was canonized in 1954.

05/01/2015

It is no coincidence that today’s feast of St. the Worker falls on the same day as the / celebration of the laborer known as or . In 1955, established the feast of St. Joseph the Worker in order to Christianize the concept of and give to all workmen a model and protector. 

05/01/2015

May 1st, FEAST OF ST. JOSEPH THE WORKER

Apparently in response to the “May Day” celebrations for workers sponsored by Communists, Pius XII instituted the feast of St. Joseph the Worker in 1955. But the relationship between Joseph and the cause of workers has a much longer history.
In a constantly necessary effort to keep Jesus from being removed from ordinary human life, the Church has from the beginning proudly emphasized that Jesus was a carpenter, obviously trained by Joseph in both the satisfactions and the drudgery of that vocation. Humanity is like God not only in thinking and loving, but also in creating. Whether we make a table or a cathedral, we are called to bear fruit with our hands and mind, ultimately for the building up of the Body of Christ.

04/30/2015

04/29/2015

Remain in light, God’s light. It shines on you throughout your day in many different ways. In prayer and meditation, in the words of another person, in reading Scripture, and in doing an act of love and kindness to someone. Walk in the light. Go to Church. Immerse yourself in the Liturgy. Become receptive to all the ways God comes to you. It will lift you up and change your life. You will have an internal abundant life.

04/29/2015

April 29th, FEAST OF ST. CATHERINE OF SIENA
The value Catherine makes central in her short life and which sounds clearly and consistently through her experience is complete surrender to Christ. What is most impressive about her is that she learns to view her surrender to her Lord as a goal to be reached through time.
She was the 23rd child of Jacopo and Lapa Benincasa and grew up as an intelligent, cheerful and intensely religious person. Catherine disappointed her mother by cutting off her hair as a protest against being overly encouraged to improve her appearance in order to attract a husband. Her father ordered her to be left in peace, and she was given a room of her own for prayer and meditation.

She entered the Dominican Third Order at 18 and spent the next three years in seclusion, prayer and austerity. Gradually a group of followers gathered around her—men and women, priests and religious. An active public apostolate grew out of her contemplative life. Her letters, mostly for spiritual instruction and encouragement of her followers, began to take more and more note of public affairs. Opposition and slander resulted from her mixing fearlessly with the world and speaking with the candor and authority of one completely committed to Christ. She was cleared of all charges at the Dominican General Chapter of 1374.

Her public influence reached great heights because of her evident holiness, her membership in the Dominican Third Order, and the deep impression she made on the pope. She worked tirelessly for the crusade against the Turks and for peace between Florence and the pope

In 1378, the Great Schism began, splitting the allegiance of Christendom between two, then three, popes and putting even saints on opposing sides. Catherine spent the last two years of her life in Rome, in prayer and pleading on behalf of the cause of Urban VI and the unity of the Church. She offered herself as a victim for the Church in its agony. She died surrounded by her "children" and was canonized in 1461.

Catherine ranks high among the mystics and spiritual writers of the Church. In 1939, she and Francis of Assisi were declared co-patrons of Italy. Paul VI named her and Teresa of Avila doctors of the Church in 1970. Her spiritual testament is found in The Dialogue.

04/27/2015

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Amherst, NS

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