Catholic Youth Media

Catholic Youth Media This is a platform for the Catholic Young People to probe further on the Catholic faith.

07/01/2026

Kangari Youth Back to School Mass

Today we visited the Hare Krishna Temple in Nairobi. The photo you see is taken in front of the sculpture of the Founder...
04/11/2025

Today we visited the Hare Krishna Temple in Nairobi. The photo you see is taken in front of the sculpture of the Founder of the Hare Krishna His Grace A.C. Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada.
If you have any questions on how Catholicity compares with Hindu religion, feel free to ask.

02/02/2024

Pope Francis: Through the Desert God Leads us to Freedom
Friday, February 2nd, 2024 @ 10:42 am

Dear brothers and sisters!
When our God reveals himself, his message is always one of freedom: “I am the Lord your God, who brought you out of the land of Egypt, out of the house of slavery” (Ex 20:2).
These are the first words of the Decalogue given to Moses on Mount Sinai. Those who heard them were quite familiar with the exodus of which God spoke: the experience of their bo***ge still weighed heavily upon them.
In the desert, they received the “Ten Words” as a thoroughfare to freedom. We call them “commandments”, in order to emphasize the strength of the love by which God shapes his people.
The call to freedom is a demanding one. It is not answered straightaway; it has to mature as part of a journey. Just as Israel in the desert still clung to Egypt – often longing for the past and grumbling against the Lord and Moses – today too, God’s people can cling to an oppressive bo***ge that it is called to leave behind.
We realize how true this is at those moments when we feel hopeless, wandering through life like a desert and lacking a promised land as our destination.
Lent is the season of grace in which the desert can become once more – in the words of the prophet Hosea – the place of our first love (cf. Hos 2:16-17).
God shapes his people, he enables us to leave our slavery behind and experience a Passover from death to life. Like a bridegroom, the Lord draws us once more to himself, whispering words of love to our hearts.The exodus from slavery to freedom is no abstract journey. If our celebration of Lent is to be concrete, the first step is to desire to open our eyes to reality.
When the Lord calls out to Moses from the burning bush, he immediately shows that he is a God who sees and, above all, hears: “I have observed the misery of my people who are in Egypt; I have heard their cry on account of their taskmasters. Indeed I know their sufferings, and I have come down to deliver them from the Egyptians, and to bring them up out of that land to a good and broad land, a land flowing with milk and honey” (Ex 3:7-8).
Today too, the cry of so many of our oppressed brothers and sisters rises to heaven. Let us ask ourselves: Do we hear that cry? Does it trouble us? Does it move us? All too many things keep us apart from each other, denying the fraternity that, from the beginning, binds us to one another.During my visit to Lampedusa, as a way of countering the globalization of indifference, I asked two questions, which have become more and more pressing: “Where are you?” (Gen 3:9) and “Where is your brother?” (Gen 4:9). Our Lenten journey will be concrete if, by listening once more to those two questions, we realize that even today we remain under the rule of Pharaoh. A rule that makes us weary and indifferent. A model of growth that divides and robs us of a future. Earth, air and water are polluted, but so are our souls. True, Baptism has begun our process of liberation, yet there remains in us an inexplicable longing for slavery. A kind of attraction to the security of familiar things, to the detriment of our freedom.
In the Exodus account, there is a significant detail: it is God who sees, is moved and brings freedom; Israel does not ask for this. Pharaoh stifles dreams, blocks the view of heaven, makes it appear that this world, in which human dignity is trampled upon and authentic bonds are denied, can never change. He put everything in bo***ge to himself. Let us ask: Do I want a new world? Am I ready to leave behind my compromises with the old? The witness of many of my brother bishops and a great number of those who work for peace and justice has increasingly convinced me that we need to combat a deficit of hope that stifles dreams and the silent cry that reaches to heaven and moves the heart of God. This “deficit of hope” is not unlike the nostalgia for slavery that paralyzed Israel in the desert and prevented it from moving forward. An exodus can be interrupted: how else can we explain the fact that humanity has arrived at the threshold of universal fraternity and at levels of scientific, technical, cultural, and juridical development capable of guaranteeing dignity to all, yet gropes about in the darkness of inequality and conflict.God has not grown weary of us. Let us welcome Lent as the great season in which he reminds us: “I am the Lord your God, who brought you out of the land of Egypt, out of the house of slavery” (Ex 20:2). Lent is a season of conversion, a time of freedom. Jesus himself, as we recall each year on the first Sunday of Lent, was driven into the desert by the Spirit in order to be tempted in freedom. For forty days, he will stand before us and with us: the incarnate Son. Unlike Pharaoh, God does not want subjects, but sons and daughters. The desert is the place where our freedom can mature in a personal decision not to fall back into slavery. In Lent, we find new criteria of justice and a community with which we can press forward on a road not yet taken.This, however, entails a struggle, as the book of Exodus and the temptations of Jesus in the desert make clear to us. The voice of God, who says, “You are my Son, the Beloved” (Mk 1:11), and “You shall have no other gods before me” (Ex 20:3) is opposed by the enemy and his lies. Even more to be feared than Pharaoh are the idols that we set up for ourselves; we can consider them as his voice speaking within us. To be all-powerful, to be looked up to by all, to domineer over others: every human being is aware of how deeply seductive that lie can be. It is a road well-travelled.
We can become attached to money, to certain projects, ideas or goals, to our position, to a tradition, even to certain individuals. Instead of making us move forward, they paralyze us. Instead of encounter, they create conflict. Yet there is also a new humanity, a people of the little ones and of the humble who have not yielded to the allure of the lie. Whereas those who serve idols become like them, mute, blind, deaf and immobile (cf. Ps 114:4), the poor of spirit are open and ready: a silent force of good that heals and sustains the world.
It is time to act, and in Lent, to act also means to pause. To pause in prayer, in order to receive the word of God, to pause like the Samaritan in the presence of a wounded brother or sister. Love of God and love of neighbour are one love. Not to have other gods is to pause in the presence of God beside the flesh of our neighbour. For this reason, prayer, almsgiving and fasting are not three unrelated acts, but a single movement of openness and self-emptying, in which we cast out the idols that weigh us down, the attachments that imprison us. Then the atrophied and isolated heart will revive. Slow down, then, and pause! The contemplative dimension of life that Lent helps us to rediscover will release new energies. In the presence of God, we become brothers and sisters, more sensitive to one another: in place of threats and enemies, we discover companions and fellow travelers. This is God’s dream, the promised land to which we journey once we have left our slavery behind.The Church’s synodal form, which in these years we are rediscovering and cultivating, suggests that Lent is also a time of communitarian decisions, of decisions, small and large, that are countercurrent. Decisions capable of altering the daily lives of individuals and entire neighbourhoods, such as the ways we acquire goods, care for creation, and strive to include those who go unseen or are looked down upon. I invite every Christian community to do just this: to offer its members moments set aside to rethink their lifestyles, times to examine their presence in society and the contribution they make to its betterment. Woe to us if our Christian penance were to resemble the kind of penance that so dismayed Jesus. To us too, he says: “Whenever you fast, do not look dismal, like the hypocrites, for they disfigure their faces so as to show others that they are fasting” (Mt 6:16). Instead, let others see joyful faces, catch the scent of freedom and experience the love that makes all things new, beginning with the smallest and those nearest to us. This can happen in every one of our Christian communities.To the extent that this Lent becomes a time of conversion, an anxious humanity will notice a burst of creativity, a flash of new hope. Allow me to repeat what I told the young people whom I met in Lisbon last summer: “Keep seeking and be ready to take risks. At this moment in time, we face enormous risks; we hear the painful plea of so many people. Indeed, we are experiencing a third world war fought piecemeal. Yet let us find the courage to see our world, not as being in its death throes but in a process of giving birth, not at the end but at the beginning of a great new chapter of history. We need courage to think like this” ( Address to University Students, 3 August 2023). Such is the courage of conversion, born of coming up from slavery. For faith and charity take hope, this small child, by the hand. They teach her to walk, and at the same time, she leads them forward.
I bless all of you and your Lenten journey.

13/06/2023

Long Post Alert: Appreciation Post.

Yester-evening, Erica and her friend Shanice were found in an empty bedsitter in Gatokoyo where they have been held all of last week.

They had been kidnapped in the early hours of Sunday morning after hailing a Bolt Taxi. They were locked in the car (doors had child lock activated) and there was a second man hiding in the boot. Attempts to fight them led to Erica being hit on her head and lower leg with a hammer but she did not sustain serious injury. Her friend had cuts on her hand from trying to pull a knife that had been held to her throat by the man in the back.

Thereafter they agreed to co-operate until their ransom was paid. The place was dingy, hidden. The conditions were very cold. But they were fed daily. The kidnappers wanted 500k for both of them. They sent messages to both myself and her friend’s mom. On Day 7 (Monday) of the Corpus Christi Novena I asked for your prayers. And now I must thank you because you came through in the BIGGEST way and STORMED heaven with those prayers.
Thank you, thank you, thank you.

Some prayed for confusion, the girls say those guys looked like they were unsure what was happening on many an occasion. Some prayed for them to be unwell, the girls say that the kidnappers were complaining they were coming down with something. Some prayed for unravelling, Erica says even the building felt like it was falling apart just like the plans of the kidnappers. Some prayed for Grace, Erica says she was enveloped with a peace she has never experienced. I had that too. So much so that I refused to pay a single shilling to these men. I did not want them to do this to any other family. I did not want to reward bad behaviour.

So we prayed for protection. They did not lay a finger on the girls. Please note for your own protection that they told the girls that the Bolt App has many crooks from different gangs doing the exact same thing! He told them: “Stay away from Bolt especially after midnight.”

All this drama happened during the Corpus Christi Novena and I did not think that it was a coincidence. Letting people know about the Real Presence of Christ in the Eucharist is not something the evil one can be happy about. But God is Good! Some were panicked, I was calm. Some were playing detective with all sorts of theories; I asked them to allow DCI to do their jobs. Some were questioning if I was doing enough because I wasn’t doing appeals through the media; I asked them to trust the process and not put my daughter’s life in jeopardy. And all through this, we kept praying.

Made it to The Eucharistic Centre in Burnt Forest on Wednesday to usher in Solemnity Thursday of Corpus Christi (The day that celebrates the Body and Blood of Christ present in the Blessed Sacrament). I asked Sister Anna Ali to whisper Erica’s name to our Friend Yeshua. I knew that I would return with a testimony. That is a very special place where Sister Anna received and passed on to us, Divine Appeals for 25 years (Read the appeals in the book 'On the Eucharist: A Divine Appeal'). The overall message being clear: Respect and revere the Real Presence of Christ in the Eucharist.

I came back home and we said the full Holy Rosary with the St Marks jumuiya group. Friday and Saturday saw visits to the Adoration Chapel and all my chats with Jesus had the same response: It is well with Erica, fear not. I was at peace. A friend sent me an amazing testimony of being delivered from kidnappers by a miracle of God.

Sunday, I go for Mass. It’s Corpus Christi Sunday. At consecration of the Host I chat with Jesus: “Wouldn’t it be nice if she came home today, on this very special solemnity marking Your Sacrament of Love?”

He answered me just as He had all week ... It is well.

And then I make eye contact with a little boy a row ahead of me. He has a special aura around him and for some reason I just want to touch his hand. I settle for a smile instead, which he cannot see through my face mask.

After Mass a gentleman comes over and tells me he follows me on Facebook. He tells me how his son had an advanced heart condition and doctors had given him no chance to live. But miracle after miracle that eventually led to heart surgery in India saved his life. He told me he knew I was at peace, the one that surpasses all understanding and that God would bring Erica home before dawn. He wanted to introduce me to his son that had undergone that miraculous healing. Along came the same boy I had seen earlier at Mass. His name is Raphael – After the Archangel. Great! I could finally touch his hand. :)

I go home and messages come in from the kidnapper. He tells me they will do something terrible to Erica that night (and record the video for me to watch) if I don't send the money. I tell him that it is Corpus Christi Sunday and ask him to read Psalms 91.

Three wonderful nuns from the Assumption Sisters of Nairobi come to visit. We discuss how this whole experience, like all struggle, is somehow for God’s glory. After they leave, an hour or so later, I receive a phone call from the DCI ... They have found the girls and have captured two suspects! I rush to Gatokoyo and hug those DCI officers who have not slept for a week searching for the girls. Much respect to them.

And thank YOU prayer warriors for taking all your prayers to the Most High God.

Let us pray:

In the name of the Father, the Son and the Holy Spirit,

Heavenly Father,

Creator of all and source of all goodness and love, please look kindly upon us and receive our heartfelt gratitude in this time of giving thanks. We acknowledge You for all gifts and blessings You have bestowed upon us: Food, shelter, health, love we have for one another on this prayer platform, family and friends. Thank You for the wonderful blessing of Corpus Christi, the Bread of Life (John 6: 51-58) ... And now, this wonderful gift of answered prayers in what has been a most Holy week celebrating the Holy Eucharist.

We thank You for Your infinite generosity. Please grant us continued Grace and blessings. We humbly come before You with a grateful heart, praising You with all our being, for we know that every good and perfect gift comes from You – The One who never changes. Thank you for Edward Mbau and his team from Nairobi Headquarters, DCIO Thika Joseph Thuvi and his team, also DCI Director Mohamed Amin and CS Murkomen. Bless them abundantly, dear Lord.

As we lift up this thanksgiving prayer, we also recognize our forgetfulness in giving You thanks each and every day. Forgive us. May we learn to thank You for the good; For You alone are worthy of our praise.

In Jesus’ Holy Name we pray. Amen.

PRAYER TO THE ADORABLE JESUS

Oh Jesus, most humble, adorable, present in the Blessed Sacrament of your Divine Love. On your concealed Sacred throne, I prostate my soul and whole self before you. Out of my nothingness and sins, I implore you to accept my poor prayers, acts of reparation and adoration to quench your thirst for souls and obtain full pardon for the many profanations, ungratefulness and outrages which you receive each and every moment from the countless number of us miserable sinners.

It was your everlasting Mercy towards mankind that moved you so deeply to the point of veiling yourself to remain in love on our altars and Tabernacles all over the earth.

Oh Jesus, by your Soul, Body and Divinity, present in the most Holy Eucharist, accept the tears of my soul that these very precious souls to you, these men that kidnapped the girls:

Timothy and Njoroge;

may not lose their Eternity forever.

The everlasting ages belong to You. So we entrust our total selves in Your loving care and gaze, now in life and death.

AMEN.

In the name of the Father, the Son and the Holy Spirit.

DM for Book of Novenas: Vol 1

List of Catholic Doctrines and Teachings that every Catholic should be familiar with.*The 7 Sacraments (The Holy Mysteri...
07/11/2022

List of Catholic Doctrines and Teachings that every Catholic should be familiar with.

*The 7 Sacraments (The Holy Mysteries):*
1. Baptism
2. Confirmation (Chrismation)
3. Eucharist
4. Penance (Confession, Reconciliation)
5. Matrimony
6. Holy Orders
7. Extreme Unction (Annointing of the Sick

*The 7 Corporal Works of Mercy:*
1. To feed the hungry
2. To give drink to the thirsty
3. To clothe the naked
4. To shelter the homeless
5. To visit the sick
6. To visit the imprisoned
7. To bury the dead

*The 7 Spiritual Works of Mercy:*
1. To counsel the doubtful
2. To instruct the ignorant
3. To admonish the sinner
4. To comfort the sorrowful
5. To forgive all injuries
6. To bear wrongs patiently
7. To pray for the living and the dead

*The 3 Eminent Good Works:*
1. Prayer
2. Fasting
3. Almsgiving

*The 7 Gifts of the Holy Ghost:*
1. Wisdom
2. Understanding
3. Counsel
4. Fortitude
5. Knowledge
6. Piety
7. Fear of the Lord

*Class of Gifts of the Holy Ghost known as Charismata:*
1. Gift of speaking with wisdom
2. Gift of speaking with knowledge
3. Faith
4. Grace of healing
5. Gift of miracles
6. Gift of prophecy
7. Gift of discerning spirits
8. Gift of tongues
9. Gift of interpreting speeches

*The 12 Fruits of the Holy Ghost:*
1. Charity
2. Joy
3. Peace
4. Patience
5. Benignity
6. Goodness
7. Longanimity
8. Mildness
9. Faith
10. Modesty
11. Continency
12. Chastity

*The 3 Theological Virtues:*
1. Faith
2. Hope
3. Charity

*The 4 Cardinal Virtues:*
1. Prudence
2. Justice
3. Fortitude
4. Temperance

*The 7 Capital Sins:*
1. Pride
2. Greed
3. Lust
4. Anger
5. Gluttony
6. Envy
7. Sloth

*The 6 Sins against the Holy Ghost:*
1. Presumption
2. Despair
3. Resisting the known truth
4. Envy of another’s spiritual good
5. Obstinacy in sin
6. Final impenitence

*The 4 Sins that Cry Out to Heaven:*
1. Willful murder
2. The sin of S***m
3. Oppression of the poor
4. Defrauding laborers of their wages

*Conditions for Mortal Sin:*
1. Grave matter
2. Full knowledge
3. Deliberate consent

*The 9 Ways We Participate in Others' Sins:*
1. By counsel
2. By command
3. By consent
4. By provocation
5. By praise or flattery
6. By concealment
7. By partaking
8. By silence
9. By defense of the ill done

*The 10 Commandments:*
1. Thou shalt not have other gods besides Me
2. Thou shalt not take the Name of the Lord thy God in vain
3. Remember to keep holy the Lord’s day
4. Honor thy father and thy mother
5. Thou shalt not murder
6. Thou shalt not commit adultery
7. Thou shalt not steal
8. Thou shalt not bear false witness against thy neighbor
9. Thou shalt not covet thy neighbor’s wife
10. Thou shalt not covet thy neighbor’s goods

*The 2 Greatest Commandments:*
1. To love the Lord thy God with all thy heart, soul, mind and strength.
2. To love thy neighbor as thyself.

*The 3 Evangelical Counsels:*
1. Voluntary poverty
2. Perpetual chastity
3. Entire obedience.

*The 6 Precepts of the Church (The Duties of a Catholic):*
1.To go to Mass and refrain from servile work on Sundays and holy days
2. To go to Confession at least once a year (traditionally done during Lent)
3. To receive the Eucharist at least once a year, during the Easter Season (known as the "Easter duty")
4. To observe the days of fasting and abstinence
5. To help to provide for the needs of the Church according to one's abilities and station in life
6. To obey the marriage laws of the Church

*The 3 Powers of the Soul:*
1. Memory
2. Intellect
3. Will

*The 4 Pillars of the Catholic Faith:*
1. The Apostles Creed
2. The Seven Sacraments
3. The Ten Commandments
4. The Lord's Prayer

*The 3 Pillars of the Church's Authority:*
1. Sacred Scripture
2. Sacred Tradition
3. Living Magisterium

*The 3 Munera (Duties of the Ordained):*
1. Munus docendi (duty to teach, based on Christ's role as Prophet)
2. Munus sanctificandi (duty to sanctify, based on Christ's role as Priest)
3. Munus regendi (duty to shepherd, based on Christ's role as King)

*The 3 Parts of the Church:*
1. The Church Militant (Christians on Earth)
2. The Church Suffering (Christians in Purgatory)
3. The Church Triumphant (Christians in Heaven)

*The 4 Marks of the Church:*
1. Unity
2. Sanctity
3. Catholicity
4. Apostolicity

*The 12 Tribes of Israel In order of their birth*
1. Reuben
2. Simeon
3. Levi
4. Judah
5.Zabulon
6. Issachar
7. Dan
8. Gad
9. Asher
10. Naphtali
11. Joseph (Manasseh and Ephraim)
12. Benjamin

*The 8 Beatitudes:*
1. Blessed are the poor in spirit: for theirs is the Kingdom of Heaven.
2. Blessed are the meek: for they shall posses the land.
3. Blessed are they who mourn: for they shall be comforted
4. Blessed are they that hunger and thirst after justice: for they shall have their fill
5. Blessed are the merciful: for they shall obtain mercy
6. Blessed are the clean of heart: for they shall see God
7. Blessed are the peacemakers: for they shall be called children of God
8. Blessed are they that suffer persecution for justice' sake, for theirs is the Kingdom of Heaven

*The 14 Stations of the Cross:*
1. Jesus is Condemned to Die
2. Jesus is Made to Bear His Cross
3. Jesus Falls the First Time
4. Jesus Meets His Mother
5. Simon Helps Jesus Carry His Cross
6. Veronica Wipes Jesus' Face
7. Jesus Falls the Second Time
8. Jesus Meets the Women of Jerusalem
9. Jesus Falls the Third Time
10. Jesus is Stripped
11. Jesus is Nailed to the Cross
12. Jesus Dies on the Cross
13. Jesus is Taken Down from the Cross
14. Jesus is Laid in the Tomb

*The 20 Mysteries of the Holy Rosary & When They are Prayed:*
*Joyful:*
1. Annunciation
2. Visitation
3. Nativity
4. Presentation
5. Finding Jesus in the Temple
*Sorrowful:*
1. Agony in the Garden
2. The Scourging
3. Crowning with thorns
4. Carrying of the Cross
5. Crucifixion
*Luminous:* 1. Baptism of Jesus.
2. Manifestation of Jesus at the wedding feast of Cana.
3. Proclamation of the kingdom of God.
4. The Transfiguration.
5. The institution of the Holy Eucharist
*Glorious:*
1. Resurrection
2. Ascension
3. Pentecost
4. Assumption
5. Crowning of Mary

Mondays: Joyful
Tuesdays: Sorrowful
Wednesdays: Glorious
Thursdays: Joyful or Luminous
Fridays: Sorrowful
Saturdays: Glorious
Sundays in Advent: Joyful

*Christmastide & Epiphany: Joyful
Eastertide & Time After Pentecost: Glorious
All of Septuagesima & Lent: Sorrowful

*The 9 Choirs of Angels In ascending order*
1. Angels
2. Archangels
3. Principalities
4. Powers
5. Virtues
6. Dominions
7. Thrones
8. Cherubim
9. Seraphim

*The 3 Levels of Reverence:*
1. Dulia: the reverence we give to Saints.
2. Protodulia: reverence given to St. Joseph as the first among saints, after the Blessed Virgin Mary.
3. Hyperdulia: the reverence we give to Mary as the greatest of Saints and Mother of God.
4. Latria: the reverence and worship we give to God alone.

*The 14 Holy Helpers:*
1. St. George, Martyr, April 23
2. St. Blaise, Bishop and Martyr, February 3
3. St. Pantaleon, Martyr, July 27
4. St. Vitus, Martyr, June 15
5. St. Erasmus (Elmo), Bishop and Martyr, June 2
6. St. Christopher, Martyr, July 25
7. St. Giles, Abbot, September 1
8. St. Cyriacus (Cyriac), Martyr, August 8
9. St. Achatius, Martyr, May 8
10. St. Dionysius (Denis), Bishop and Martyr, October 9
11. St. Eustachius (Eustace), Martyr, September 20
12. St. Catherine of Alexandria, Virgin and Martyr, November 25
13. St. Margaret of Antioch, Virgin and Martyr, July 20
14. St. Barbara, Virgin and Martyr, December 4

*The 7 Last Words of Christ:*
1. Father, forgive them, for they know not what they do. (Luke 23:34)
2. Amen I say to thee: This day thou shalt be with me in paradise. (Luke 23:43)
3. Woman, behold thy son. . . .Behold thy mother. (John 19:26-27)
4. Eli, Eli, lamma sabacthani? (My God, My God, why hast Thou forsaken me?) (Matthew 27:46, ref. Psalm 21)
5. I thirst. (John 19:28)
6. It is consummated.(John 19:30)
7. Father, into Thy hands I commend my spirit. (Luke 23:46, ref. Psalm 30:6)

*The 4 Last Things (The Novissima):*
1. Death
2. Judgement
3. Heaven
4. Hell

THE “SMILING POPE” BECOMES BLESSED JOHNPAUL IOn Sep. 4, 2022, Pope Francis beatified John Paul I, fondly known as the “s...
05/09/2022

THE “SMILING POPE” BECOMES BLESSED JOHNPAUL I

On Sep. 4, 2022, Pope Francis beatified John Paul I, fondly known as the “smiling pope”, in St. Peter’s Basilica. The mass was celebrated by Cardinal Marcello Semeraro, prefect of the Dicastry for the Causes of Saints.

Who was Pope John Paul I?

He was born Albino Luciani in Forno di Caale, northwest of Venice, on Oct. 17, 1912.
In 1935, he was ordained a priest of the diocese of Belluno-Feltre.
In 1947, he received his doctorate in Theology from the Pontifical Gregorian University in Rome.
In 1949, he published Catechetica in Briciole (Catechesis in Crumbs)
In 1958, he was appointed bishop of Vittorio Veneto by Pope John XXIII, in the region of Venice.
In 1969, he was named Patriarch of Venice by Pope Paul VI. He served there for 9 years.
In 1973, he was named cardinal by Pope Paul VI.

Upon the demise of Pope Paul VI, he was elected Pope on Aug. 26, 1978. He was introduced to the crowd as Johannes Paulus. He became the first pope to take a double name to honour his two predecessors: Pope John XXIII and Paul VI. Explaining on this choice he said: “I shall be called John Paul”. I have neither the “wisdom of the heart” as Pope John, nor the preparation and culture of Pope Paul, but I am in their place. I must seek to serve the Church. I hope that you will help me with your prayers.

In Sep. 29, 1978, he died having served as a pope for only 33 days.
He was reputed for his simplicity and humility. He was described by Carlo Conalonieri, the then dean of the college of cardinals as one who “passed as a meteor which unexpectedly lights up the heavens and disappears, leaving us amazed and astonished”.

In the same year, 1978, a polish cardinal Karol Wojtyla was elected pope on Oct. 16. He took the name of his predecessor, thus becoming Pope John Paul II. 1978 thus became “The Year of the three popes”.

John Paul 1 was the last Italian-born Pope breaking a tradition of 456 years that saw 45 popes elected at the See of St. Peter.

In Nov. 23, 2003, he was declared the “servant of God” by Pope John Paul II, marking the first step towards sainthood.
The second step came on Nov. 8, 2017, when he was declared “venerable” by Pope Francis.
Thirdly, he was beatified on Sep. 4, 2022, after a miracle attributed to his intercession was certified in Buenos Aires in Argentina.
The final phase is canonization to sainthood. This too will require another certified miracle in order for the church to declare John Paul I a saint.

THE COST OF DISCIPLESHIP  From the Homily By Rev Fr. Conrad Otende.Given on September 4, 2022, at St. Thomas Aquinas Sem...
04/09/2022

THE COST OF DISCIPLESHIP From the Homily By Rev Fr. Conrad Otende.
Given on September 4, 2022, at St. Thomas Aquinas Seminary, Nairobi.

Fr. Conrad started by giving the story of the three men on their journey to heaven. According to the story, Jesus gave each the cross to carry and follow him to the heavenly banquet. The first man, feeling the cross heavy upon his shoulders, he decided to cut it short, the second man chiselled it thinner. Only the third man braved to carry the heavy cross. When they were almost nearing heaven, they came across a river that required them to use their crosses as the bridge. The first man could not cross because his ‘bridge’ was shorter, the second man drowned because the weak cross could not support his weight. Only the third man reached his destiny because he persevered to carry his cross till the end.
Having introduced thus, he returned to the first reading (Wisdom 9:13-18), which is a prayer for wisdom in order to understand the will of God. Fr Conrad enumerated five points that can help us understand the will of God:
I. Faith/trust in God the Father and Jesus as our brother.
II. Understand the Challenges in our community
III. Pray
IV. Be Ready to change
V. Listen to the promptings of the Holy Spirit
He was quick to note that the body and its desires suppresses the soul. He identified two components of the soul: Fire and Water. According to Fr Conrad, the Fire represents the negative thoughts and emotions such as anger, confusion, hatred and the like, while the water represents the positive thoughts and motions such as the fruits of the Holy Spirit: Peace, love, joy etc. According to Fr, there is need for the balance between the Fire and the water.
He noted that among many purifications of the soul, there are psychological purification and baptismal purification. On Baptism purification, he noted that the person is cleansed of all sins, made a child of God, and ones Christian spiritual life is enriched with five principles that purify the soul:
I. Gift for personal prayer
II. Humility
III. Thankful heart
IV. Social justice
V. Community life
Commenting on the Second reading (Philemon 1:9-10, 12-17), he noted St Paul’s selflessness, detachment and self sacrifice, to let Onesmus go back to his master in spite of being in jail, old and sick, and knowing too well that he would be deprived of Onesmus’ much needed services in his captivity. He called upon all his listeners to emulate Paul’s selflessness.
Heeding to Pope Francis’ call to emphasize on the spirit of Synod and Synodality, Fr Conrad explained the Gospel (Luke 14:25-33), on Jesus call to take one’s cross and follow him; using the five principles of the Synod on Synodality:
I. Encounter with people
II. Dialogue with all peoples
III. Listen
IV. Discernment
V. Choice
Jesus call for his disciples to hate their families, Fr Conrad noted, is a call for detachment and to love God more than our families and ourselves. He emphasized on counting the cost, and choosing to accomplish what one has started with love and determination without giving up. He advised, quoting John Mason’s The Enemy Call Average, to desist from mediocrity because it is the worst enemy in the journey of discipleship. He called on everyone to add value in other people’s lives because it is a task for every Christ’s disciple.

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