Showing posts with label Mary. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mary. Show all posts

Thursday, December 12, 2013

Guadalupe Feasting


Today is the feast day of Our Lady of Guadalupe
This image (which I stole from Sara Miles FB page)
gives a much richer meaning to "feast" day!


Wednesday, November 7, 2012

room for waiting

 
“A waiting person is a patient person.
The word patience means the willingness to stay where we are
and live the situation out to the full in the belief
that something hidden there will manifest itself to us.”
Henri J.M. Nouwen

this photo of a mural at a community health center waiting room from the west side of Chicago is from here.

Friday, April 6, 2012

Good Friday

Photo of Mary’s 4th Sorrow – The Meeting
Taken at Monastery Memorial Gardens
from Mater Dolorosa Passionist Retreat Center, Sierra Madre, CA

“God of Compassion, so many times we feel utterly helpless
when we experience the brokenness and pain in the lives of others around us. 
We feel incompetent when we see the many homeless persons walking the streets; 
we feel powerless when we see our world crushed by fighting and violence,
even in our own neighborhoods and cities! 
Help us to be men and women who are strong in faith. 
Help us to do all that we can do to assist others.
But above all else, help us to remember that it is when we feel most powerless
that we are able to act with the strength that comes
from your Holy Sprit of love and compassion.”

Arranged by Sr. Judith Rinok, S.N.J.M.




Wednesday, April 4, 2012

Seven Sorrows of Mary

While at the Mater Dolorosa we walked the ‘Seven Sorrows of Mary.’
It was in a gated garden surrounded by wisteria vines – such an aroma!

Below is the first station with the prayer of Mary
as she heard Simeon foretell the destiny of her son.

The mosaics were beautiful and the prayers profound,
especially as we journey towards Good Friday.


The First Sorrow ~ The Prophesy

The prophet, Simeon, foresaw that the child Mary held so lovingly in her arms
was the one destined to fulfill God’s plan of redemption for his people.

Simeon also knew that Mary would see her beloved son, Jesus,
enter into the mystery of his Passion and death.

And so, Simeon spoke of a sword that would pierce her heart,
a sword of sorrow in seeing the reality of suffering unfold
in the life of her very own child.


“Help us, Loving God, to remember all parents today who see suffering in the lives of their sons and daughters.

Some will suffer because of illness; others will feel great sadness at the loss of faith or love in their children’s lives;

still others will experience much grief because of addictions to alcohol or drugs.

Like our Blessed Mother, these parents, too, feel the sword of suffering and pain.

Help us to love and support each of these parents, as well as their loved ones, in such difficult and trying times.

Help us to bring life and hope to them in the midst of their struggles.’

Tuesday, January 31, 2012

Chilean Magnificat

I wish I knew where this art came from.

I discovered it on Pinterest and it’s

presently my favorite “Lady of Guadalupe” image.

Then to discover a Chilean woman’s interpretation of

Mary’s Magnificat? Turned out to be a fine pairing.



 Magnificat

“With pride and dignity I sing my song of joy

when I feel the Lord’s presence;

I am poor and very ordinary,

but one day the Lord looked upon me

And the history of the poor will give witness to my joy.

God is unfettered and unpredictable,

He is called our great friend.

And throughout our history He has favored those of us

who are weak.

His triumphant force shows itself each day

when He exposes the foolishness of the powerful.

He uncovers the feet of clay of those in power,

and nourishes the yearning of the poor.

To those who come hungry He gives bread and wine.

And to the wealthy He exposes their selfishness

and the emptiness of their ways.

This is God’s desire: always to favor the poor.

Now finally we can walk.

He is faithful to His promises.”


- Chilean Woman


from “Soul Weavings” A gathering of Women’s Prayers”

edited by Lyn King, 1996, page 21

Wednesday, December 21, 2011

first at the cradle

"Perhaps it is no wonder that the women were
first at the Cradle and last at the Cross.
They had never known a man like this Man -
there never has been such another.
A prophet and teacher who never nagged at them,
never flattered or coaxed or patronised:
who never made arch jokes about them...;
who rebuked without querulousness
and praised without condescension;
who took their questions and arguments seriously;
who never mapped out their sphere for them,
never urged them to be feminine or jeered at them for being female;
who had no axe to grind and no uneasy male dignity to defend;
who took them as he found them and was completely unself-conscious.
There is no act, no sermon, no parable in the whole Gospel
that borrows its pungency from female perversity;
nobody could possibly guess from the words and deeds of Jesus
that there was anything "funny" about woman's nature."
 
(Dorothy Sayers, as quoted in the book "Freeing Theology")
 
photo from here
 
can you see the heart?

Thursday, December 8, 2011

Mary of the Sign


Today is the feast of the Immaculate Conception,
which has been celebrated as far back as the 7th century
and celebrates the conception of Mary in her mother Anne's womb.
 
As we count down the days until the birth of Christ,
let us honor Mary through this icon (and what, in an ancient yet modern way,
resembles an ultrasound of the child she carried!)
The following piece is from  the December issue of
Contemplative Outreach News
which you can read in its entirety here.

Mary of the Sign
Mary stands square to the viewer, her poised
stillness or silent constant prayer is noted in
the hands, palms extended outward in total
surrender to what has been given. Mary clutches
and yearns for nothing. In early icons Mary was
portrayed as the Burning Bush and Christ the
fire that burns within. She is represented as the
divine vessel of burning love. She knows
and loves Him even before His birth.
 
The orb containing this revelation rests within her
being, Christ surrounded in gold, symbolizing
the totality of God without image. Christ is
holding a tiny scroll, a symbol of the Scripture
being fulfilled in Him and later to be filled in
each and every one of us. Christ is our interior
teacher, guide master, and rabbi. The icon’s
theology is the link between the Jewish tradition
and the new understanding of Christ.
 
“The Lord Himself will give you a sign, behold a
young woman shall conceive and bear a child
and his name will be Emmanuel.” - Isaiah 7:14.
 
Excerpt taken from The Mary Collection 2008
by Mary Jane Miller. To see more work done by
Mary Jane Miller, go to:
 
 
click here to see Mary Jane Miller's icon of Mary of the Sign.
it is stunning!