Lansing Cristo Rey Young Adults

FOR THIS WE PRAY... 



Pray the Rosary
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LORD, HEAR OUR PRAYERS...

... For married couples trying to conceive.  May God hear their cries.

FOR THIS WE PRAY...

There is healing power in prayer.  As we ask for prayer, we seek the intercession of Our Blessed Mother, Mary and her Son, Jesus.  We also ask for the help of our Holy Saints in heaven.

If there are prayer intentions you would like to add, send them on to me.  For the protection and privacy of us all, we will not post full names of individuals asking for prayer. (God knows who they are!) In addition to requests for prayer, please also send us updates and stories of healings and miracles that God has granted through our prayer.


"For I will restore you to health; of your wounds I will heal you, says the Lord."
Jeremiah 30: 17

"When he disembarked and saw the vast crowd, his heart was moved with pity for them, and he cured their sick."
Matthew 14:14

"Some fell sick from their wicked ways, afflicted because of their sins. They loathed all manner of food; they were at the gates of death. In their distress they cried to the Lord, who saved them in their peril, sent forth the word to heal them, snatched them from the grace. Let them thank the Lord for such kindness, such wondrous deeds for mere mortals. Let them offer a sacrifice in thanks, declare his works with shouts of joy!"
Psalm 107: 17-25



Wednesday
February 8, 2012


St. Josephine Bakhita


For many years, Josephine Bakhita was a slave but her spirit was always free and eventually that spirit prevailed.

Born in Olgossa in the Darfur region of southern Sudan, Josephine was kidnapped at the age of seven, sold into slavery and given the name Bakhita, which means fortunate. She was re-sold several times, finally in 1883 to Callisto Legnani, Italian consul in Khartoum, Sudan.

Two years later he took Josephine to Italy and gave her to his friend Augusto Michieli. Bakhita became babysitter to Mimmina Michieli, whom she accompanied to Venice's Institute of the Catechumens, run by the Canossian Sisters. While Mimmina was being instructed, Josephine felt drawn to the Catholic Church. She was baptized and confirmed in 1890, taking the name Josephine.

When the Michielis returned from Africa and wanted to take Mimmina and Josephine back with them, the future saint refused to go. During the ensuing court case, the Canossian sisters and the patriarch of Venice intervened on Josephine's behalf. The judge concluded that since slavery was illegal in Italy, she had actually been free since 1885.

Josephine entered the Institute of St. Magdalene of Canossa in 1893 and made her profession three years later. In 1902, she was transferred to the city of Schio (northeast of Verona), where she assisted her religious community through cooking, sewing, embroidery and welcoming visitors at the door. She soon became well loved by the children attending the sisters' school and the local citizens. She once said, "Be good, love the Lord, pray for those who do not know Him. What a great grace it is to know God!"

The first steps toward her beatification began in 1959. She was beatified in 1992 and canonized eight years later.


Comment:

Josephine's body was mutilated by those who enslaved her, but they could not touch her inner spirit. Her Baptism set her on an eventual path toward asserting her civic freedom and then service to God's people as a Canossian sister.

She who worked under many "masters" was finally happy to address God as "master" and carry out everything that she believed to be God's will for her.


Quote:

During his homily at her canonization Mass in St. Peter's Square, Pope John Paul II said that in St. Josephine Bakhita, "We find a shining advocate of genuine emancipation. The history of her life inspires not passive acceptance but the firm resolve to work effectively to free girls and women from oppression and violence, and to return them to their dignity in the full exercise of their rights."



Information courtesy of:
American Catholic
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