Pre-Christmas Message from the Sacred Heart - Interior locutions received on Saturday, December 13, 2025, in church. From the Site: Messaggi del Sacro Cuore di Gesù
Say This Prayer Before Opening Christmas Gifts by | Dec 17, 2025 | Christmas Come, Lord Jesus, be our guest, and let these Christmas gifts to us be blessed.“Give thanks unto the Lord,for He is good and His mercy endures forever.”- Psalm 136:1Traditional Prayer The Catholic Liturgical Year by Claudine Macalisang | Dec 16, 2025 | Catholic Church, November Catholic Liturgical Year Dates For 2025 First Sunday of Advent – December 1, 2024 Advent Season – December 1–24, 2024 Christmas Day – December 25, 2024 Christmas Season – December 25, 2024 – January 12, 2025 Epiphany of the Lord – January 5, 2025 Baptism of the Lord –... Only A Few Days Left To Enter The Catholic-Link Liturgical Living Giveaway by Becky Roach | Dec 4, 2025 | Faith & Life We're so excited to select FIVE of our email subscribers to WIN each of these packages below. It's easy to enter. Just click the link HERE! Looking for extra entries? Go comment, like, and share any of our social media posts about the Liturgical …
The Archdiocese of Portland reported on social media on December 19 that new kneelers for Communion have been installed at St. Mary’s Cathedral, just in time for the Christmas season. The Archdiocese is led by Monsignor Alexander Sample.
The new communion kneelers have arrived just in time for Advent and the Christmas Season at St. Mary's Cathedral in Portland, Oregon.
@mccallansteve …and then bring back the authentic teachings, practices, and beliefs of the Catholic Church that were followed by all faithful Catholics for nearly 2000 years before the Modernists of Second Vatican Council created the counterfeit Conciliar religion and watch God smile on this nation and the world once again.
@mccallansteve The TLM is already in his Diocese and has been for some time. He’s one of the strongest advocates for it among the U.S. Bishops and has celebrated it often himself.
Pope Leo XIV appointed Father Manuel de Jesus Rodriguez as the bishop of Palm Beach, Florida. Born January 15, 1974, in the Dominican Republic, Rodriguez became a Salesian of Don Bosco and was ordained a priest on July 3, 2004. He is currently the parish priest at Our Lady of Sorrows Church in Queens, in the Diocese of Brooklyn. Monsignor Rodriguez became a U.S. citizen in 2018. He has regularly been revealing his thoughts on Twitter since 2014. Staunch Loyalist of Wonderful Francis He is a priest “who loves Pope Francis and defends immigrants”. According to him, Francis’ writings were amazing, beautiful, crystal clear and straight to the point. March 2024, “11 years of the Pope of Mercy today: how many blessings bestowed upon us all through his ministry! How many people welcomed back to the Church! How many wrongs fixed! How much justice done! May God keep & protect him for many years to come. Long live the Pope!” September 2024 about a papal travel: “Our heroic Holy Father going …More
Palm Beach: Apostate & Gay activist Robert Prevost is promoting Manuel de Jesus Rodriguez, who is a supporter of sodomy, fan of Fiducia Supplicans, and gay priest James Martin, as "bishop" of the synodal church.
Legionário, April 4, 1943, No. 556, p. 2 by Plinio Corrêa de Oliveira A friend of Legionário, talking to me a few days ago, informed me that it is once again becoming necessary to clarify Catholic opinion on the connection between political, social, and economic problems and Catholic doctrine. In reality, I think there is no subject more debated among Catholics than this one. However, I understand my friend's observation. The modern environment is so permeated with the idea that religion constitutes in the lives of individuals and peoples a watertight compartment, without contact with activities other than the mere celebration of acts of worship and—at most—the practice of the duties that the Law of God and the Church imposes on each individual, that from time to time it is convenient to renew the true Catholic notion on the subject. And for the Legionary, this is a simply vital necessity. In fact, I do not know what judgment a Catholic should make of our newspaper, for whom the …More
December 20 FIFTH DAY Novena of aguinaldos Or Christmas PRAYER TO BEGIN Every day By the sign of the holy cross... Most benign God of infinite charity that you loved men so much, that you gave them in your son the best pledge of your love, so that made a man in the bowels of a Virgin, he was born in a manger for our health and remedy. I, on behalf of all mortals, give you infinite thanks for such sovereign benefit. In return from Him I offer you the poverty, humility and other virtues of your humanized Son, begging him for his divine merits, for the discomforts with which he was born and for the tender tears he shed in the manger, have our hearts with deep humility, with lit love, with total contempt of everything earthly, so that the newborn Jesus has in them his cradle and lives eternally. Amen. Glory to the Father (x 3) It is read about every day. December 20 FIFTH DAY Consideration We have already seen the life that the Child Jesus led in the bosom of his purest Mother; let us see …More
Let us talk about something that honestly needs to be said, especially right now during Simbang Gabi. Have you ever walked into a church early, trying to recollect yourself, trying to pray, trying to prepare your soul for Mass, and then suddenly there is music blasting from the speakers and church volunteers dancing in the nave like it is a variety show? Yes. That. If you have experienced that, then you already know exactly why this is a problem. And if you have not thought about why it is a problem, let me explain it very clearly and very bluntly. We go to church to escape the noise of the world. Full stop. The outside world is already loud, chaotic, overstimulating, and exhausting. Music everywhere. Performances everywhere. Screens everywhere. Noise everywhere. Church is supposed to be the one place where all of that stops, even if just for an hour. The church is meant to be a refuge. A place of silence. A place where the soul can breathe again. But what happens instead? You walk in …More
Organize before its to late - ISLAM IS POISON - Hundreds of residents filled the Broken Arrow, OK Planning Commission chamber, with crowds lining the walls and spilling into overflow rooms, as public comment and a vote took place on whether to approve or deny the development of an Islamic temple in the Tulsa suburb.
Wide Awake Media @wideawake_media Dr. Ben Marble suggests "we need to quit accepting blood" from people who took the Covid injections. "The entire blood supply in America, and basically the whole world, is contaminated with the spike protein poison bioweapon." "We're seeing patients that get blood transfusions that are unvaccinated, and suddenly they get blood clots or have heart attacks or strokes."
The O Antiphons - December 20th: O Key of David (O Clavis David) O Key of David and sceptre of the House of Israel; you open and no one can shut; you shut and no one can open: Come and lead the prisoners from the prison house, those who dwell in darkness and the shadow of death Traditionally, a key is a symbol of authority. Consider Christ handing over the keys to St. Peter, symbolizing the institution of the papal authority on earth. In a monastery, there is great significance to the transition of keys to the new abbot. When one has the keys to a home or place, they inherit the authority to lock or unlock the entrance depending on who knocks at the door. In this way, they also inherit a responsibility to keep the place safe, protected from unwanted intruders, and shut off from the erosive elements. With Christ, we find the ultimate Authority, yet the most merciful Gatekeeper. We are reminded that all we need to do is “knock and the door shall be opened unto you” (Matthew 7:7). Not …More
Pope Leo XIV has today appointed Bishop Charles Moth, 67, currently Bishop of Arundel and Brighton, as Archbishop of Westminster. Born in Chingola, Northern Rhodesia (now Zambia), he moved with his family to the United Kingdom at the age of two. He grew up in Kent and first felt called to the priesthood as a teenager. He was ordained a priest on 3 July 1982 for the Archdiocese of Southwark and went on to study canon law, working in parish ministry and as private secretary to the Archbishop of Southwark. He later became vicar general of the archdiocese. In July 2009, Pope Benedict XVI appointed him as the Bishop of the Forces in the UK. In March 2015, Pope Francis promoted him to Bishop of Arundel and Brighton. Safe Bureaucrat and Establishment Person Last week, The Tablet gave a profile of the bishop in anticipation of his nomination. Bishop Moth is remembered as the former Bishop of Prisons and the Armed Forces, and is considered a safe choice to secure the 'establishment'. He is "not …More
Late one night, a burglar broke into someone else’s house. He switched on his flashlight and began creeping from room to room, searching for valuables. Suddenly, a voice came out of the darkness: “Jesus is watching you.” The burglar nearly had a heart attack. He snapped the flashlight off and froze, listening. Minutes passed. Silence. Letting out a shaky breath, he turned the light back on and kept searching. Just as he reached for the next drawer, the same voice spoke again: “Jesus is watching you.” Now panicking, the burglar spun around and swept the room with his flashlight. In the corner, he finally spotted a cage with a large, brightly colored parrot inside. “Was that you?” he whispered angrily. “Yep, that was me,” the parrot replied calmly. “Just thought I’d warn you. You’re being watched.” The burglar laughed and relaxed. “You really scared me. So what’s your name, smart guy?” “My name is Moses,” the bird said. “Moses?” the burglar snorted. “Who in the world names a …More
1. Never offer a handshake while sitting. Stand up and show respect. 2. When you are a guest, never criticize the food. Gratitude matters more than preference. 3. Do not take the last piece of something you did not buy or bring. 4. Protect those who stand behind you, and respect those who stand beside you. 5. In negotiations, do not be the first to name a number. 6. Never take credit for work you did not do. Integrity always surfaces. 7. Dress well, regardless of the occasion. How you present yourself reflects how you value others. 8. Speak honestly. Say what you mean, and mean what you say. 9. Ask more questions than you answer. Curiosity is a form of intelligence. 10. Leave crude language to those who lack better words. 11. Avoid using your phone when you are with someone. Presence is a sign of respect. 12. Listen carefully, smile when appropriate, and above all maintain eye contact. 13. If you were not invited, do not ask to be included. Boundaries matter. 14. Never be ashamed of …More