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Personal Holiness

 

Pope John Paul II’s Plan for the Third Millennium

                                                               
Listen to How to Be Holy, Dan Lynch's Retreat. Pope John Paul II inaugurated the Third Millennium by consecrating it  to Our Lady. This is a set of four audio tapes or three CD’s of a retreat on Pope John Paul II’s plan for the Third Millennium. It consists of four talks, Personal Holiness; Knowing God; Loving God and Serving God. For more information, please call 888-834-6261.                                              


A Retreat by Dan Lynch

To order Dan's 3 hour retreat, click here.

RETREAT OUTLINE

Rosary Luminous Mysteries.  Pray for peace and family.

Overview of Personal Holiness, the Pope’s Plan. His two Apostolic Letters, At the Beginning of the Third Millennium and On the Meaning of the Rosary.
The meaning of Holiness and the universal call to it. Shun from evil by Divinization. The Way to divinization is through conversion to Jesus Christ, reconciliation with Jesus Christ and one another, relation with Jesus Christ with prayer and the sacraments, meditation on Jesus Christ, consecration to Jesus Christ, reparation to Jesus Christ, imitation of Jesus Christ and action for Jesus Christ. Like any story, the story of holiness has a beginning, middle and an end.

Knowing God 1 The beginning of Holiness through Conversion and Reconciliation: Conversion is repentance. 2 Chron. 7:14.

Reconciliation with God and one another. Confession, reconcile before receiving the  Eucharist, avoid sacrilegious communions.

Knowing God 2 The continuation of holiness through personal Relation with Jesus. We are saved not by a plan but by a person, whom we encounter in scripture and tradition, prayer, sacraments (especially Confession and Eucharist) and each other
Meditation:  Knowing God from Scripture and Tradition. Mediation on Luke 5. Studying God in The Catechism of the Catholic Church.

Loving God. The middle of holiness through Consecration and Reparation.
Consecration: The Spirituality of Pope John Paul II.
Reparation: Meaning – Prayer (3 rosaries day), Fasting, (Wednesday and Friday) Adoration, Our Lady of Fatima, Our Lady of Akita and First Saturday Devotion.

Serving God. The end of holiness through Imitation and Action to be happy now and forever. St. Mary, Model of Holiness for the Laity, St. Juan Diego (his Marian virtues), St. Jose Maria Escriva, saint of ordinary daily life.

Divine Mercy (Divine Mercy for abortion in America).
Our Works of Mercy (spiritual and corporal works) and the virtues (Cardinal and Temporal).  The Gospel of Life and the Gospel of Suffering. BE attitudes (Beatitudes in Matthew) and not DO attitudes. We are human BEings, not human DOings.
Reasons for Hope. (See below).
We are the Light of the World. Call to be Prophets of Hope.

Helps for Holiness

Holiness Defined: 
           
           
Holiness is the perfection of charity. “All Christians in any state or walk of life are called to the fullness of Christian life and to the perfection of charity.” All are called to holiness: “Be perfect, as your heavenly Father is perfect.” Catechism of the Catholic Church 2013

Ask Mary’s help by praying the Hail Mary: 

Gabriel:           Hail Mary, full of grace . . .
Elizabeth:        Blessed is the fruit of thy womb, Jesus,
Church:           Holy Mary, Mother of God, pray for us sinners . . .

Mary is holy and our model of holiness because she is full of grace. Her holiness is shown by her fruits -Blessed is the fruit of thy womb, Jesus.

            But we are not holy; we are sinners who ask her to pray for our holiness. She acts as an intercessor for our holiness and that’s why we ask her to pray for us sinners – so that we may imitate her virtues and be holy as she is holy.

Read
the liturgical readings of the day and reflect on them. Website:   http://www.e3mil.com/index.asp?lid=1
Or subscribe to Magnificat and read them. Tel.: 1-800-317-6689 or 301-853-6600 or E-mail from their website:  www.magnificat.net
Subscribe to Zenit for daily Catholic news:  http://www.zenit.org/english/subscribe.html

Attend daily Mass

Pray
daily Morning Offering, Rosary (3 if possible), Chaplet of Divine Mercy or at least Angelus at 6 a.m,12 p.m. and 6 p.m.
In our prayer, we should form PACTS with God through
P
raise, Adoration, Contrition, Thanksgiving and Supplication.
We should also listen to Him more than we talk to Him.

Weekly adoration holy hour and frequent visits to the Blessed Sacrament.

Monthly First Friday and First Saturday devotions.

Sanctify everyday life – Morning Offering, St. Michael and Guardian Angel prayers. Pray the Divine Office daily or the Christian Prayer shorter version. Try to pray the Liturgical Hours of morning, evening and night prayers.
Readings are in the Liturgy of the Hours, Christian Prayer or at web site: http://www.universalis.com/
The purpose of the Divine Office is to sanctify the day and all human activity.

"St. Jose Maria was chosen by the Lord to proclaim the universal call to holiness and to indicate that everyday life, ordinary activities, are the way of sanctification.”

Pope John Paul II’s Total Consecration Renewal on October 17, 2002:

"Most Holy Mother, [...] obtain also for me the strength of body and spirit, so that I will be able to fulfill to the end the mission assigned to me by the Risen One.

"I give to you all the fruits of my life and of my ministry, I entrust to you the future of the Church; [...] I trust in you and to you I say once again: 'Totus tuus, Maria! Totus tuus!' Amen. [Totally yours, Mary! Totally yours!]

“I entrust once again to the hands of the Mother of God the life of the Church and that of sorely tried humanity.

"To her I also entrust my future. I place everything in her hands, so that with a  Mother's love, she will present it to her Son."

Practice the Works of Mercy

          “The works of mercy are charitable actions by which we come to the aid of our neighbor in his spiritual and bodily necessities. Instructing, advising, consoling, comforting are spiritual works of mercy, as are forgiving and bearing wrongs patiently. The corporal works of mercy consist especially in feeding the hungry, sheltering the homeless, clothing the naked, visiting the sick and imprisoned, and burying the dead.” Catechism of the Catholic Church 2447.

Reasons for Hope

“For I know the plans I have for you, says the LORD, plans for welfare and not for evil, to give you a future and a hope. Then you will call upon me and come and pray to me, and I will hear you. You will seek me and find me; when you seek me with all your heart, I will be found by you, says the LORD . . . (Jer. 29:11-14).

              The Congress of Catholic Laity ended with an appeal to the laity worldwide to be “prophets of hope” in the third millennium. Christians must “bring the light of the Gospel into society, where we are called to be prophets of Christian hope.” There are two important reasons for hope, “the presence of Jesus Himself and the conviction that the heart of man is made for truth, justice, happiness and beauty.” November 30, 2000

 Pope John Paul II:

              “May the tears of the last century be the seeds of hope for this century.”

   “Duc in altum! These words ring out for us today, and they invite us to remember the past with gratitude, to live the present with enthusiasm and to look forward to the future with confidence: "Jesus Christ is the same yesterday and today and forever." (Heb. 13:8). (At the Beginning of the Third Millennium).

About the sexual abuse scandal: “We must be confident that this time of trial will bring a purification of the entire Catholic community, a purification that is urgently needed if the church is to preach more effectively the Gospel of Jesus Christ in all its liberating force. Now you must ensure that where sin increased, grace will all the more abound (Romans 5:20). So much pain, so much sorrow must lead to a holier priesthood, a holier episcopate, and a holier church…. “The Second Vatican Council spoke about “a new creation, in an initial way here on earth, in full realization at the end of time.” Pope John Paul II said, “ Inspired by this certainty, the Christian walks with courage on the roads of the world seeking to follow God’s steps and collaborating with him in the birth of a horizon in which ‘mercy and truth will meet, justice and peace will embrace.’”

“God is preparing a great springtime for Christianity, and we can already see its first signs. . . people are gradually drawing closer to gospel ideals and values, a development which the Church seeks to encourage.  . . rejection of violence and war; respect for the human person and for human rights; the desire for freedom, justice and brotherhood; the surmounting of different forms of racism and nationalism; the affirmation of the dignity and role of women.

          Christian hope sustains us in committing ourselves fully to the new evangelization and to the worldwide mission, and leads us to pray as Jesus taught us:” Thy Kingdom come. Thy will be done, on earth as it is in heaven.” (Mt. 6:10). (Mission of the Redeemer).

            In the new era brought by Christ, "God and man, man and woman, humanity and nature are in harmony, in dialogue, in communion.

            "The authentic new era is nothing other than the re-establishment of the lost relation between God and man. Christ must cancel the work of devastation, the horrible idolatry, violence and every sin that the rebellious Adam has spread in the secular affairs of humanity and on the horizon of creation.

            "Jesus recapitulates' Adam in himself, in whom the whole of humanity recognizes itself; he transfigures him into son of God, he brings him to full communion with the Father.

            “Christ's new era also embraces "nature itself ... subjected as it is to lack of meaning, degradation and devastation caused by sin," which will thus participate "in the joy of the deliverance brought about by Christ in the Holy Spirit." (
February 15, 2001).

The Actions of Pope John Paul II: 

His Consecration of the world to the Immaculate Heart of Mary in 1984 brought the downfall of Communism without bloodshed.

His Consecration of the American continent to Our Lady of Guadalupe in 1999 brought three Christian presidents to America for the beginning of the Third Millennium in the United States, Mexico and the Philippines.

His Consecration of the Third Millennium to Our Lady will bring the Era of Peace.

 
Hopeful Events in the World:

            There is growing awareness of universal human rights, the sense of the right of a people to self-government, appreciation of cultural identity, respect for minorities, and the general positive perception of the value of democracy and the free market, inter-religious dialogue, ecological awareness and respect for the environment created by God.

Progress in education, communication, medicine, and in science are motives of hope for the well being of humanity and of gratitude to the Creator.

A great awakening to spiritual values and search for a peaceful interior life, the good aspects of globalization contributing to the future of a more united world that is jointly responsible and educates toward recognizing a human family.

            Many new movements are flourishing in the Church with their witness of joy in faith, hope and in love. We have the Pope, Mary and the Eucharist!

The Pope’s Eight Challenges and Prayer Intentions for the World

            Pope John Paul II believed that nations and leaders must face eight great challenges if a more-just world is to be achieved. These eight have as a common denominator to put every man and woman at the center of development.

             On January 10, 2002, the Pope reflected on the world scene, with all its hopes and horrors, and presented to the ambassadors of countries accredited to the Vatican his eight great challenges to the world. These challenges are our prayer intentions for the world.

            1. Protection of human life. According to John Paul II, the first challenge facing the world is
                "the defense of the sacredness of human life in all circumstances, especially in relation to
                the challenges posed by genetic manipulation."

            2. Promotion of the family. “ In the face of a globalized society that at times reduces people
                to the level of mere statistics, the family is the first place where "purely functional
                relationships" are overcome, in order to establish "interpersonal relationships that are rich
                in inner depth, gratuitousness and self-sacrifice," as John Paul II explained Oct. 15, 2000,
               during the Jubilee of Families. In the family, the man, woman and child are not consumers
               but persons with first and last names.

            3. Elimination of poverty. "The elimination of poverty, through efforts to promote
               development, the reduction of debt, and the opening up of international trade."

            4. Human rights. “Respect for human rights in all situations, with especial concern for
               the most vulnerable: children, women and refugees."

            5. Disarmament.  “Disarmament, the reduction of arms sales to poor countries, and
               the consolidation of peace after the end of conflicts."

            6. Medicine for all. The sixth challenge is "the fight against the major diseases, and
               access by the poor to basic care and medicines."

            7. Conservation of the environment. People must "encourage and support the
               'ecological conversion' which in recent decades has made humanity more sensitive
               to the catastrophe to which it has been heading."

            8.  Application of law. The eighth challenge is "the rigorous application of
                 international law and conventions."

           "Of course," the Pope told the ambassadors when he ended his list of challenges, "many other demands could also be mentioned." He added: "But if these priorities became the central concerns of political leaders; if people of good will made them part of their daily endeavors; if religious believers included them in their teaching, the world would be a radically different place."

Listen to How to Be Holy, Dan Lynch's Retreat. Pope John Paul II inaugurated the Third Millennium by consecrating it  to Our Lady. This is set of four audio tapes or three CD’s of a retreat on the Holy Father’s plan for the Third Millennium. It consists of four talks, Personal Holiness; Knowing God; Loving God and Serving God. For more information, please call 888-834-6261.