Evangelist Adonis Sunday

Evangelist Adonis Sunday Lifting high the name of God

28/01/2021

A young man saw his primary school teacher at a wedding ceremony.
He went to greet him with all respect and admiration!!
He said to him:
"Can you still recognize me Sir?'
'I don't think so!!', said the Teacher, 'could you please remind me how we met?'
The student recounted:
"I was your Student in the 3rd Grade, I stole a Wrist watch belonging to my then classmate because it was unique and fascinating.
My Classmate came to you crying that his Wrist Watch had been stolen and you ordered all Students in the class to stand on a straight line, facing the wall with our hands up and our eyes closed so you could check our pockets.
At this point, I became jittery and terrified of the outcome of the search. The shame I will face after other Students discovered that I stole the Watch, the opinions my Teachers will form about me, the thought of being named a ' thief' till I leave the School and my Parents' reaction when they get to know about my action.
All these thoughts flowing across my heart, when suddenly it was my turn to be checked. I felt your hand slipped into my pocket and you brought out the Watch. I was gripped with fear, expecting the worse to be announced. I was surprised I didn't hear anything, but Sir, you continued searching other Students' pockets till you got to the last person.
When the search was over, you asked us to open our eyes and sit on our Chairs. I was afraid to sit because I was thinking you will call me out soon after everyone was seated.
But to my amazement, you showed the watch to the class, gave it to the owner and you never mentioned the name of the one who stole the watch. You didn't say a word to me, and you never mentioned the story to anyone.
Throughout my stay in the school, no Teacher or Student knew what happened. This incident naturally taught me a great lesson and I resolved in my heart never to get myself involved in taking whatever is not mine.
I thought to myself, you saved my dignity."
"Do you remember the story now Sir? You can't simply forget this story Sir!!"
The teacher replied, ' I vividly remember the story that I found the Watch in a pocket but i did not know in whose pocket the stolen Watch was found that day because I searched your pockets while I also had my eyes closed."
In life, we need wisdom for everything we do. As Parents, Teachers, Pastors, Leaders etc... *We should be able to close our eyes to some things. Not all misbehaviour require punishment. Some will need encouragement, some mentoring and some monitoring.*

*Be a Leader who impacts, not one who shatters.*
Rare to find

Good morning everyone!

16/12/2020

Keep Alive A Passion for Holiness This Advent
FR. NNAMDI MONEME, OMV
Keep Alive A Passion for Holiness This Advent
“Do you want to become a saint?” That was the very first line I saw in a vocation promotion pamphlet of my religious congregation many years ago. My response then was a passionate, enthusiastic, and fervent “Yes” that led me to join the congregation a short while later. I was definitely spurred on then by the heroic examples of holiness by my favorite saints.

Do I still want to be saint today? Yes, I still desire to be saint but I honestly admit that the passion and the fervor seem to have faded somewhat. Maybe we too have at one point in our lives had a passionate desire for holiness but now find our passion for holiness fading fast.

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What kills our passion and enthusiasm for holiness? It may be our personal struggles, repeated sins and failures, scandalous behavior of those whom we looked up to in the Christian life, difficulties of life, the pain and suffering of the Christian life, greater self-knowledge that shows us that we are far from being as holy as we thought we were, etc.

These reasons show that we are losing our passion for holiness because we think that holiness is something that we do or achieve by our effort. We think that we become holy if we say the right prayers, follow a particular rule or code of conduct, belong to particular group, overcome a sinful habit, etc. As long as our focus is on ourselves and our performance, then we will surely lose our passion for holiness and be overcome by discouragement.

On the contrary, Christian holiness, that fullness of divine life and perfection of charity, is attained by simply disposing ourselves to receive and experience the holiness of God that He is offering us in His Son, Jesus Christ, through the sanctifying power of the Holy Spirit. The focus is on God as we allow His actual graces to dispose us to receive His sanctifying grace that makes us holy. St. Ignatius of Loyola describes the need for such disposition in these words:

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“There are very few who realize what God would make of them if they abandoned themselves entirely into His hands, and let themselves be formed by His grace…Many people who, we see, now scarcely live as Christians, do not understand that they could become saints, if they would let themselves be formed by the grace of God, if they did not ruin His plans by resisting the work which He wants to do.”

John the Baptist was a “messenger sent ahead of Christ, to prepare His way.” Though he “proclaimed a baptism of repentance for the forgiveness of sin,” and all went out to him, “and were baptized by him in the Jordan River as they acknowledged their sin,” the Baptist’s mission was not to make them holy but to dispose them for the holiness that Christ alone brings. His baptism and their confessing their sins could not take away sins but only served to remind them of their sinfulness and their need for a savior and His own holiness.

John the Baptist knew that that there was nothing that he could do on his own to bestow holiness on them. Everything that he said and did – his preaching, baptism, dressing, food – was to remind them of the urgency of the Messiah’s return and their need to be properly disposed to receive His own holiness. That is why he finally attested after all he had done and said, “One mightier than I is coming after me. I am not worthy to stoop and loosen the thongs of His sandals. I have baptized you with water; He will baptize you with the Holy Spirit.”

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Jesus Christ is the truly Holy One, the One who bears in Himself the Holy Spirit and imparts to us this same Spirit of holiness from above. We only have to dispose ourselves to receive this holiness that Christ longs to work and achieve in us in and through the circumstances and events of our lives.

The following are some dispositions that we must have to experience the holiness of Christ?

First, we must have complete trust in God always because God desires our holiness in all that He does and permits in our lives, “This is the will of God for you: your sanctification.”(1Thes 3:4) Because God desires our holiness more than we do, He will surely make us holy in His own way if we remain properly disposed. This is why we must trust in His merciful love, divine grace, and unceasing plan for our sanctification. His mysterious plan for our ongoing sanctification and salvation is present and effective today even as we face the Covid-19 pandemic.

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Secondly, we continue to make effort to be open and docile to His grace no matter the lack of visible results because God is patient with us, “With the Lord one day is like a thousand years and a thousand years like one day…He is patient with you, not wishing that any should perish but that all should come to repentance.” Our effort at ongoing repentance and giving ourselves to God is a sign of our goodwill towards Him. We too must be patient with ourselves and with others as we make effort for holiness.

Thirdly, we persevere till the end because our wicked world is passing away. While we strive to “conduct ourselves in holiness and devotion,” we also wait for a “new heaven and a new earth in which righteousness dwells.” A time will come when holiness will prevail over evil and godlessness. God will make His holiness triumph in us and in the world in His own time if we maintain our proper disposition.

No matter how far we have fallen from His grace, our desire for holiness remains in us always because God has loved that desire into us. We can only hunger and thirst for more of what we have already received and experienced. Our desire for holiness is like a homing device by which God calls us back to Him after we have accepted the truth that there is nothing that we can do on our own to make us holy or to bestow this holiness on others.

This is why our vocation as members of the Church is to be constantly disposed for holiness ourselves and to help others to develop the same disposition. This is how we are to build up the body of Christ and “hasten the coming of the day of the Lord.”

Some recent episodes in the Church call us to really examine our fidelity to this mission to spread this right disposition for holiness. Are we disposing ourselves for holiness when we hear more of scandals and cover up in the Church than we hear of humble acceptance of errors and sincere ongoing repentance from sin? How can we be disposed for holiness when we are so busy pretending we are sinless and immaculate? Are we disposing others for holiness when members of the hierarchy now campaign for civil status for same-sex couples?

Are we disposing others for holiness when we hand out the Eucharist like free food samples in the mall by giving Holy Communion to people in adulterous relationships and radical and avowed pro-abortion politicians? Shouldn’t we rather dispose them for the fruitful reception of holiness from the sacraments by helping them to form their consciences well according to the truths of the faith, and then confess their sins with true sorrow and firm purpose of amendment? Are we disposing ourselves and others for holiness when we shut our churches and cancel Masses and sacraments faster than the strip clubs and bars in the face of pandemics? Shouldn’t we all be striving to approach the sanctifying sacraments as if that Eucharist or Confession were the very last of our lives?

My dear brothers, we must not lose our passion, enthusiasm, and fervor for our holiness and the holiness of others for any reason. It is a precious gift from God. But we must not be focused on ourselves or our efforts at holiness. We are to simply dispose ourselves properly by being attentive to what God is doing to make us holy in and through the circumstances and events of our lives.

If we are not always disposed to receive the holiness of Christ, nothing on this earth will ever satisfy us as Jesus stated in this beatitude, “Blessed are those who hunger and thirst for righteousness, they will be satisfied.”(Mt 5:6) Our undying passion for holiness is the condition to receive the divine blessings that alone satisfy us.

Jesus Christ, “who alone is the holy one,” comes with His sanctifying grace in this Eucharist to make us holy. He only asks us to be disposed to receive His holiness like Mama Mary did and to help others be properly disposed too. If He finds us properly disposed and our passion for His holiness vibrant and alive, He will make us truly holy and then we will be truly satisfied.

Glory to Jesus!!! Honor to Mary!!!

05/09/2020
05/09/2020
17/06/2020

*ANYTHING THAT ANNOYS YOU* is teaching you patience and calmness.
*Anyone that abandons you* is teaching you how to stand up on your own feet.
*Anything that offends you* is teaching you forgiveness and compassion.
*Anything that has power over you* is teaching you to get greater power.
*Anything that you hate* is teaching you unconditional love.
*Anything that you fear* is teaching you courage to overcome your fears.
*Anything you can't control* is teaching you to let go.
*Any NO you get from humans* is teaching you to be independent.
*Any problem you have* is teaching you how to get solution to problems.
*Any attack you get* is teaching you the best form of defence.
*Anyone wh Dro looks down on you* is teaching you to look up to GOD.

Always look UP☝️ for God to Show you the lesson in every situation you face in every phase of life.

*Good afternoon everyone !*
*See you at the top!* ❤️😘💃🎀👍

11/06/2020

*GOLDEN RULES CHILDREN HAVE TO OBEY*

1. *Respect 3 People*
*. Teachers
*. Parents
*. Elderly

2. *Keep 3 things in you*
*. Honesty
*. Faith
*. Good Deeds

3. *Be Free from 3 things*
*. Arrogance
*. Cheating
*. Pride

4. *Control 3 things*
*. Tongue
*. Anger
*. Appetite

5. *Reject 3 things*
*. Bad deeds
*. Backbiting
*. Jealousy

6. *Obtain 3 things*
*. Knowledge
*. Understanding
*. Wisdom

7. *Build on 3 things*
*. Godly counsel
*. Good Manners
*. Godliness with contentment

8. *Keep 3 things pure*
*. Body
*. Environment
*. Thoughts

9. *Remember 3 things*
*. Death
*. Hell
*. Heaven ,If you miss it, you cannot miss the former_Hell.

10. *Protect 3 things*
*. Family
*. Future
*. Friends

11. *Work on 3 things*
*. Vision
*. Trust
*. Faith

12. *Run away from 3 things*
*. Sin
*. Selfishness
*. Bad association

13. *Love 3 People*
*. God
*. Yourself
*. Others

*May the Almighty God continue to guide us and accept us, Amen

05/06/2020

ON COMMUNION ON THE TONGUE

1. Every bishop, in accordance with the provisions of the Canon Law, is empowered to take pastoral decisions for his local church irrespective of whatever is happening on similar or related issues any where in the world. So the Bishop of Lokoja Diocese is not obliged to follow whatever is happening in any other diocese anywhere in the world when the pastoral expediencies of his diocese do not call for such.

2. Why the sudden quest for Holy Communion in the hand? Do we also think of the pastoral consequences which outweigh the “reasons” purported for the practice? Is Ebola or Covid 19 the first communicable diseases in the world since the Church started the practice of Holy Communion on the tongue centuries ago? Is there any record to show that these diseases are transmitted through Holy Communion on the tongue? Does Communion on the palm a total guarantee that diseases cannot be communicated in the process? What are the real pastoral needs for Communion in the hand? What are the limits for science in matters of faith and mystery?

3. What form of “New” Catechesis on Communion in the hand do we want to begin to adopt that would still guarantee the sense of sacred our forebears attached to the Eucharist and which would not amount to a dangerous departure from the old practice of reverencing the Sacrament? Our forebears surely adhered strictly to the practice of Communion on the tongue despite the fact that there were other communicable diseases at their own time. So what are the real reasons for this agitation for Communion in the hand?

4. Is Holy Communion in the hand (anywhere in the world) not a sign of loss of faith in the Sacrament? Is it not a sign that our sense of the sacred is overwhelmed by rationalism and relativism? The practice of Holy Communion in the hand in Europe and other places in the world, is it a heroic sign of faith? Is there any know saint in the history of the Church that received Communion in the hand? (I will like to know of one) But if none, why did they not do so? As the saying goes “Familiarity breeds contempt”. Sooner or later, the agitation would move from Holy Communion in the hand to “personal or self anointing or absolution” at baptism, confirmation, viaticum and confession. Already, the Church is witnessing a terrible decline in the way people now go for the Sacrament of Reconciliation. Once the Eucharist is ridiculed, other Sacraments of the Church would surely suffer the same fate.

5. Has anyone seen any Mass celebrated by the present or past popes where the Holy Father personally dispensed or gave Communion in the hand? ( I will also like to be shown one) If none, why does he not do that? I sincerely desire to know.

6. Does it not speak deeply to those that can perceive things spiritually that for over One Hundred and Twenty years of the Catholic faith in our Diocese and more than Fifty years of the canonical er****on of the diocese, no serious case of desecration of the Eucharist was recorded until one that happened in 2017 when the adoration chapel at the Cathedral (the Center of our faith in the Diocese) was broken into and the Monstrance taken away with the Blessed Sacrament in it. This happened after Ebola made us to start the practice of Communion in the hand in the diocese. Is this not worrisome enough and a sign that our faith could be attached from within? If so, does that terrible act of desecration by unknown person(s) not in itself a continuous call of every Catholic faithful in the diocese to a deeper devotion and reverence of the Eucharist?

7. Today, many Protestant churches now do “Holy Communion” and in the hand too. In fact, Winners Chapel teaches that you can “consecrate” it yourself. Practices like these have both direct and indirect impacts on us as Catholics. In the face of such, why do we have to put so much pressure on ourselves to abandon our age long practice and Sacred Tradition to start receiving communion in the hand? Is this call for Communion in the hand not a new form of “Protestant Revolution” in the Church?

8. The Catechism of the Catholic Church teaches us that the Eucharist is the “Body, Blood, Soul and Divinity of Our Lord Jesus Christ”. If we truly believe in this teaching as Catholics, why are we thinking that Jesus can infest us with Hepatitis B or Covid 19 in the Communion when the Church has so many testimonies of healing through the Eucharist? Where lies our faith?

9. In this matter, the decision of the Bishop is most prudent considering the fact that just as he cannot underplay the health and safety of the people of God in his diocese, he is equally obliged to safeguard the Deposit of the Faith against all forms of errors and abuses. It would also be presumptuous to think that such decisions were taken without due diligence or consultation with medical or health experts.

10. Finally, we must not forget that the Eucharist is the Church. The more we expose and subject the Eucharist (Christ) to ridicule the more we are exposed to greater errors and evils. The moment the Eucharist is demystified, that would mean the beginning of the end of the Church! And I can posit strongly that Communion in the hand is not just a subtle way of desecration but a gradual demystification of the Eucharist and the Church. Sooner or later, one of the consequences would now be the “lose of faith” and “empty Churches” as we have in Europe.

11/05/2020

D PRODIGAL SON!
THIS IS WHAT MOST PREACHERS HAVE NOT TOLD US WHENEVER THEY PREACH ABOUT THE PRODIGAL SON.
I have heard so many messages preached on the altar about the prodigal son (Luke 5:11-32) but this very sermon by a visiting priest in my parish was different.

As I listened to the homily, I learned some things that boosted my curiosity and left me with a serious concern…

My concern is that whenever the story of the prodigal son is narrated, the emphasis and focus is always centered on the prodigal son himself…

According to the Priest, we have spent so much time analyzing the prodigal son's errors that we have become blinded to the errors of another major character (individual) in the same story…

The elder brother to the prodigal son…

If you look at the church today, you will see a lot of Christians who fit into the description of the elder brother of the prodigal son…

They appear zealous, holy and committed but when you take a closer look at their lives, you’ll begin to spot similar errors…

The Priest had just four (4) questions for the elder brother of the prodigal son…

He said any where we see him, please help him ask the "elder brother" these four (4) questions:

1. Where were you, when your younger brother was making the terrible decision he made?

2. How come you never made any attempt to go look for your younger brother to know how he was coping after he left the house?

3. Why were you angry and bitter that he returned and that his return was celebrated?

4. Why were you giving your father reasons why he shouldn’t have celebrated the return of your brother?

A Christianity where the errors and fall of a fellow comrade becomes an opportunity to rise is evil…

A Christianity where we try to gain favor and prove loyalty before authority by discrediting or running down a fellow brother is satanic…

A Christianity where we neglect and abandon our wounded brothers is demonic…

A Christianity where the strong does not uphold the weak is satanic…

A Christianity where the fall of a fellow brother/sister becomes a topic for gossips and discussions is evil…

A Christianity where we prefer discussing the weakness of a fellow comrade behind him/her to approaching and correcting him/her in love is evil…

A Christianity where we pray for a fellow brother/sister to err or fall so we can occupy his/her position is barbaric…

If you see Generational Impact smoking cigarette on the street after he has preached on facebook, will you reach out to him in love and intercede on his behalf…?

If the fall of a fellow comrade does not touch and compel you to intercede on his behalf, then you are still far from God…

Enough of the hate in church…

Enough of plotting against each other…

Enough of analyzing and amplifying each other’s weakness…

We will do greater exploit as a team and as a unified body…

I am not your enemy, the devil is…. My fall should not bring joy to you…

Let us uphold each other and show love to the wounded in our midst…

03/01/2020

One of the earliest descriptions of Baptism is vitae spiritualis ianua, which means "the door to the spiritual life." To grasp the full meaning of this is to understand something really decisive about Christianity.
For Christianity is not primarily about "becoming a good person" or "doing the right thing" or in Flannery O’Connor’s famous phrase, "having a heart of gold." Let’s face it: anyone—pagan, Muslim, Jew, nonbeliever—can be any of those things.

To be a Christian is to be grafted on to Christ and hence drawn into the very dynamics of the inner life of God. We become a member of his Mystical Body, sharing in his relationship to the Father.

It is so important that we are baptized "in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit." For Baptism draws us into the relationship between the Father and the Son, which is to say in the Holy Spirit. Baptism, therefore, is all about grace—our incorporation, through the power of God’s love, into God’s own life.
Wishing you all a happy and prosperous New year, 2020

11/12/2019

How to be a Handmaid of the Lord,
Like Mary
On December 12, we celebrate the Feast of Our Lady of Guadalupe and recall, in the Gospel reading at Mass, the story of the Annunciation (Luke 1:26-38). Mary became a pure vessel in which God dwelt during the nine months of pregnancy. Her “yes” to the special vocation of serving the kingdom of God as the mother of the Messiah did not end when her Son died on the cross. She became mother to the whole Church.
God planned her vocation at the beginning of our story in Genesis, when he told the serpent, “I will put enmity between you and the woman, and between your offspring and hers” (Gen. 3:15). She said yes to that vocation when she said to the angel Gabriel and to God, “Behold, I am the handmaid of the Lord. Let it be done to me according to Your word” (Luke 1:38).
To get a deeper understanding of what her fiat, her “yes” entailed — and what happens when we say “yes” to God — we need to look at the word “handmaid.” What did she mean by that? According to the dictionary, a “handmaid” is someone whose essential function is to assist. ASSIST! Not: Take charge of. Not: Become the Savior of. Not: Be such a good priest or lay minister or religious brother/sister that people admire you and give you the credit for a job well done.
An assistant is often called the employer’s “right hand” or, more literally, an extension of the employer’s hand.
When I am given an assignment by God, such as “Write a book about … ” or “Give a retreat about … “, my first inclination is to kick into high gear all the organizational and leadership skills in which God has endowed me and trained me. When I see someone wandering into darkness and God nudges me to intervene, my strong sense of caring moves me to action, and if I don’t see results fast enough (by my definition of it), I start assuming that I’m not trying hard enough and must push into higher gear.
None of this is being a handmaid of the Lord. None of this is being an extension of God’s hand. It’s me being me, stretching out my own hand to see how far I can make it reach. Let’s consider how Mary modeled the assistant’s job:
(1) First and foremost, to willingly become someone’s handmaid requires great trust in the person (or God) who is going to be the master. As Pope John Paul the Great wrote in his Encyclical Letter Redemptoris Mater (Mother of the Redeemer) , paragraph 13: “Mary uttered this fiat in faith. In faith she entrusted herself to God without reserve and ‘devoted herself totally as the handmaid of the Lord to the person and work of her Son’ (Vatican Council II, Lumen Gentium , para. 56).”
(2) Mary left the consequences of her “yes” in God’s hands. She did not make her “yes” conditional, as in “Okay, Archangel Gabe, but only if you explain to Joseph why I’m pregnant and he’s not the father” or “Just make sure the townsfolk don’t stone me to death or even criticize me for getting pregnant without Joseph.”
(3) She made a complete commitment to align herself with God. He was free to do with her as he willed. She did not second guess him. Nor did she offer her own opinion about where the baby should be born or what should be done with the animals or what kind of visitors they should get. This is what it means to be an extension of God’s hand. We are not the hand. We are not God.
(4) By choosing to say “yes” she opened herself to receive all the help she would ever need from God to fulfill her vocation. It was not Mary who convinced Joseph to go through with the marriage instead of divorcing her; it was God who sent Joseph an angel in a dream.
(5) Her consent came from true humility — the same kind of humility that her Son would have in consenting to the crucifixion. Such willingness lets go of all desire for self-comfort and personal gain. It is a total giving of self, an altruism that comes from knowing that God’s goodness is far greater than our own best efforts.
(6) Being the Lord’s assistant is a partnership with the Holy Spirit, who is the “handmaid” or servant of the other two members of the Blessed Trinity in carrying out all divine operations. The transformation of Mary’s “yes” into an actual pregnancy required the servanthood of the Holy Spirit. Mary cooperated with the Holy Spirit “by her obedience, faith, hope and burning charity in the Savior’s work of restoring supernatural life to souls” ( Lumen Gentium , para. 62). A good handmaid is more than just an obedient servant; faith, hope and love provide the motivation in union with the Holy Spirit.
(7) Giving consent meant not only allowing God to do things to her , but also doing things for God . As his handmaid, she put herself into the position of being done unto. He did not order her around or abuse this position in any way, but he did put her into some very difficult situations. Certainly it was not easy traveling on a donkey to Bethlehem in the last month of pregnancy. Giving birth in a chilly, dirty stable without her mother’s help was probably not the way she had imagined this special moment would be. And fleeing to Egypt instead of returning home with the baby was a very disappointing and challenging time. Yet, she let God do this to her because she had meant it when she said she’d be his handmaid. At the same time, she was doing it all for God out of tremendous love for him.
(8) Mary’s “yes” united her to both the intentions and actions of God. His intentions became her intentions. His actions became her actions. The Father intended to redeem the world through his Son; Mary intended to redeem the world through her Son in accordance with his plan as it unfolded. The Father let his Son die for our sins; Mary let go of her Son as she watched him die, even though she did not yet fully understand the plan. God was in charge, and Mary united herself to whatever he did.
(9) A good handmaid listens closely to what the master wants. Mary had said, “Let it be done to me according to Your WORD.” She was a good listener. “Through faith Mary continued to hear and to ponder that word, in which there became ever clearer, in a way ‘which surpasses knowledge’ (Eph. 3:19), the self-revelation of the living God. Thus in a sense Mary as Mother became the first ‘disciple’ of her Son” ( Redemptoris Mater , para. 20).
(10) Since a handmaid of the Lord is a disciple of Christ, a handmaid is also a true follower. It’s not hard to figure out what God wants of us because Jesus is leading us to do the same things that he did (see John 14:12). In Redemptoris Mater , paragraph 41, we read: “She who at the Annunciation called herself the ‘handmaid of the Lord’ remained throughout her earthly life faithful to what this name expresses. In this she confirmed that she was a true ‘disciple’ of Christ, who strongly emphasized that his mission was one of service: the Son of Man ‘came not to be served but to serve, and to give his life as a ransom for many’ (Matt. 20:28).
Today, as Queen of Heaven, Mary still continues to serve as God’s handmaid. As Pope John Paul the Great added in paragraph 41, “The glory of serving does not cease to be her royal exaltation: assumed into heaven, she does not cease her saving service, which expresses her maternal mediation ‘until the eternal fulfillment of all the elect’ ( Lumen Gentium , para. 62).
Like Mary’s service, our ministries do not end when we leave the earth. We would do well to give our full “yes” now to our vocations as handmaids (for the guys: use the word “hand-servants”), because in one way or another, we’ll be doing it in front of God’s face when heaven is our home.
Let us rely on Mary’s ministry of being God’s handmaid whenever we need his helping hand to reach us. And let us allow her to teach us how to do the same for others.
To read the full Encyclical Letter “Redemptoris Mater”, go to: ewtn.com/library/ENCYC/JP2MOTHE.HTM.
How can you be God’s hand touching the lives of those around you? Are you trying to control it and do things your way? Have you avoided doing a good deed that Jesus would have done, something he could do through you now? Listen to what he is asking you to do for him and say, “Lord, let it be done to me according to Your will; I am your handmaid (or hand-servant).”

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