"Love follows knowledge."
"Beauty above all beauty!"
– St. Catherine of Siena

Wednesday, December 17, 2025

Photo Essay: December 2025 Snow

The first snow storm of the winter always makes for some great photos, and this past Sunday (Dec 14th) we had our first.  It was only supposed to be about three inches.  We wound up with over double that.  So much for having faith in their predictions.

Let’s share some photos.  First from my bedroom window looking out the back of the house.  I’ve mentioned this before, but behind my backyard used to be a convent.  It was sold and now is some Hasidic Jewish facility.  But I am still blessed with open field from my window.




 


It does look like a snowstorm, doesn't it?  It was coming down hard at the time of that picture. 

Now looking out my front window.

 





Here are a couple of snaps around my neighborhood.

 





It was only six inches but a fluffy snow.  It looks so much more.

Here is one from my backyard.  Look carefully and you will see one of the black kittens leaping through the snow.

 


I mentioned about the litter of black kittens born in my backyard.  They are still there!  Here is a zoom in of the kitten.

 


Speaking of black pets, here is Rosie standing out very well against the white snow.


 


 


 


The old dog (she's now eleven years and four months old) loved it out there.  

When I got over to my mother’s house, I took a picture of her Madonna.



Call her Our Lady of the Snows.  Actually that is a title of the Blessed Mother under Our Lady of the Snows.  It goes back to the year 352 when a summer snow storm hit Rome.    

Since it was Sunday, we made it to Mass in the snow.  Thank God for four wheel drive.  Here is Our Lady with the Christ Child covered with snow.



All the donated Christmas wreaths hung along the church fencing were dusted with snow.  Here is ours.



Finally since the day before, December 13th, was the Feast Day of St. Lucy, our pastor still had the statue of St. Lucy by the sanctuary for veneration.



My family has a special devotion to Santa Lucia for several reasons which I will save for another day.

Sunday, December 14, 2025

Sunday Meditation: Rejoice! Make a Space in Your Heart

In the Third Sunday of Advent in Year A, John the Baptist from prison has his disciples ask if Jesus is the messiah.  Jesus replies with evidence of what He has done: the blind see, the lame walk, lepers are cleansed, the deaf hear, and the dead are raised.  Jesus is alluding to not just the first reading of today’s lectionary but several other Old Testament prophesies.  Three years ago I embedded a video from Dr. Brant Pitre explaining the allusions.  Not only do the allusions point to a messiah, but it points to the coming of God.

The Third Sunday of Advent is the turn from the stern exhortations from John the Baptist to the joyful coming of the Jesus, and so we have the rose candle for the celebration.  All of nature rejoices with the coming birth.

 


Here is the Gospel passage.

 

When John the Baptist heard in prison of the works of the Christ,

he sent his disciples to Jesus with this question,

"Are you the one who is to come,

or should we look for another?"

Jesus said to them in reply,

"Go and tell John what you hear and see:

the blind regain their sight,

the lame walk,

lepers are cleansed,

the deaf hear,

the dead are raised,

and the poor have the good news proclaimed to them.

And blessed is the one who takes no offense at me."

 

As they were going off,

Jesus began to speak to the crowds about John,

"What did you go out to the desert to see?

A reed swayed by the wind?

Then what did you go out to see?

Someone dressed in fine clothing?

Those who wear fine clothing are in royal palaces.

Then why did you go out?  To see a prophet?

Yes, I tell you, and more than a prophet.

This is the one about whom it is written:

Behold, I am sending my messenger ahead of you;

he will prepare your way before you.

Amen, I say to you,

among those born of women

there has been none greater than John the Baptist;

yet the least in the kingdom of heaven is greater than he."

~Mt 11:2-11

 

Fr. Geoffrey Plant explains the fullness of the significance of Gaudete Sunday. 




“So when John the Baptist asked, “Are you the one who is to come?” he was drawing on this rich tapestry of expectation: the Coming One was the long-awaited agent of God’s final and saving intervention in the world.”  He would be not just a messiah, but a Divine Messiah.  Both John and Jesus start their ministry with a call for repentance but they understand it differently.  The winnowing fan and the unquenchable fire on one side while on the other side is “mercy, healing, forgiveness, and inclusion.”  That is what confused John and made him ask the question. 

Here is another new homilist, this from United States Conference of Catholic Bishops (USCCB).  I did not know the USCCB had a daily reflection and Sunday homily on YouTube.  It looks like it’s about a year old.  They seem to alternate bishops to give the reflection or homily.  Oh this is a nice find.  Today’s homily is not even by a full bishop.  It’s from Most Rev. Jeffrey R. Haines, Auxiliary Bishop of the Archdiocese of Milwaukee. 



“So what does this mean for us?  It means for making space for preparing to receive Christ, a reception of Jesus each week especially at Christmas requires that our prayer and worship strengthen us to take on the challenges of our lives and our world….How can we begin to create a space in our heart this advent? We can be signs of joy to our families, our communities and those we meet.”  That is the pastoral message for this Gaudete Sunday.  Rejoice!

 

Sunday Meditation: "Go and tell John what you hear and see: the blind regain their sight, the lame walk, lepers are cleansed, the deaf hear, the dead are raised, and the poor have the good news proclaimed to them.”

 

Not a hymn today but the dramatization of this scene as portrayed in The Chosen.

 


The realism of The Chosen sometimes makes me wince a little, but overall it is very well done.

 

Saturday, December 13, 2025

Faith Filled Friday: Our Lady of Guadalupe, Mariachi Band Mass

Today is the feast of Our Lady of Guadalupe, memorializing the day and event of when Our Lady appeared in Mexico to Juan Diego in 1531.  You probably know the history, but if you don’t make sure you read the Wikipedia entry and search out Catholic sites that will relate the story and devotion.  Our Lady under this title is super important in this segment of the world, carrying the additional monikers of Empress of the Americas, Patroness of Latin America, Queen of Mexico.  If you live in North or South America, this is our native Marian devotion.




Needless to say Our Lady of Guadalupe is huge in Mexico.  And so is Mariachi Music, a native musical genre from western Mexico.  When the Mexicans celebrate the Feast of Our Lady of Guadalupe, it is very common to integrate Mariachi Music into the Mass.  For the first time ever, today at my parish of St. Rita in Staten Island we celebrated today’s feast day with a Mariachi band for musical accompaniment. 

It was different.  It was endearing.  It was wonderful! 

I wish I had videoed all the musical parts of the Mass.  I only captured two at the end of Mass.  Both were after the pastoral blessing when the band moved up to the image of Our Lady of Guadalupe and serenaded the Blessed Mother.  Here are the videos.

 


And here’s how they ended with a more upbeat tune.

 


Oh that was wonderful, and you can see our two pastors, Frs. Eugene and Anthony clapping along behind the altar.  Fr. Eugene is planning to do this annually.  Unfortunately I did not get the name of the band.

One last thing.  Our Lady of Guadalupe has a special place in my heart.  That was the name of my parish in Brooklyn growing up. 


 

Sunday, December 7, 2025

Sunday Meditation: Repent, for the Kingdom of Heaven is at Hand

For the second Sunday of Advent in Year A, we meet John the Baptist and he bellows out his message of repentance for the coming of the Messiah. 

 


Here is the Gospel passage.

 

John the Baptist appeared, preaching in the desert of Judea

and saying, "Repent, for the kingdom of heaven is at hand!"

It was of him that the prophet Isaiah had spoken when he said:

A voice of one crying out in the desert,

Prepare the way of the Lord,

make straight his paths.

John wore clothing made of camel's hair

and had a leather belt around his waist.

His food was locusts and wild honey.

At that time Jerusalem, all Judea,

and the whole region around the Jordan

were going out to him

and were being baptized by him in the Jordan River

as they acknowledged their sins.

 

When he saw many of the Pharisees and Sadducees

coming to his baptism, he said to them, "You brood of vipers!

Who warned you to flee from the coming wrath?

Produce good fruit as evidence of your repentance.

And do not presume to say to yourselves,

'We have Abraham as our father.'

For I tell you,

God can raise up children to Abraham from these stones.

Even now the ax lies at the root of the trees.

Therefore every tree that does not bear good fruit

will be cut down and thrown into the fire.

I am baptizing you with water, for repentance,

but the one who is coming after me is mightier than I.

I am not worthy to carry his sandals.

He will baptize you with the Holy Spirit and fire.

His winnowing fan is in his hand.

He will clear his threshing floor

and gather his wheat into his barn,

but the chaff he will burn with unquenchable fire."

~Mt 3:1-12

 

I’m really enjoying Archbishop Edward Wiesenberger’s homilies.  Here is another fine homily on this Gospel passage.

 


No Jesus without John the Baptist first.  No Christmas joy without the stern message of John.  No Jesus without metanoia, “an internal change of heart along with a very real external change of life.”

The archbishop alludes to this, but it should be noted more clearly that baptism of John was not a sacramental baptism.  There is a distinction.  John’s baptism is only a baptism of repentance.

Now for a homily that bucks the trend.  I would say just about all the homilies on today’s Gospel emphasizes the sternness of John the Baptist’s message, just as Archbishop Wiesenberger does above.  Even my pastor, Fr. Eugene at St. Rita, who almost never has a stern homily emphasized the Baptist’s sternness.  Now here is a homily that looked at this Gospel and found something in it that was not so stern.  This is someone new again, a Dominican priest from the Central Province (St. Albert Province), Fr. Samuel Hakeem. 



“Acknowledge, let us acknowledge our sins” as we do at every Mass.  When one acknowledges ones sins he is nine tenths the way to repentance.

 

 

Sunday Meditation: "Therefore, stay awake!  For you do not know on which day your Lord will come.”

 

 

One of my favorite hymns that comes up at Mass this time of year, Bernadette Farrell’s “Christ Be Our Light.”


 

Longing for light, we wait in darkness.

Longing for truth, we turn to you.

Make us your own, your holy people,

Light for the world to see.


Christ, be our light! Shine in our hearts.

Shine through the darkness.

Christ be our light!

Shine in your church gathered today.

Just lovely.

Friday, December 5, 2025

Redeemer in the Womb: Jesus Living in Mary by John Saward, Post #1

Happy First Week of Advent!

This is the first post of several posts on Redeemer in the Womb: Jesus Living in Mary by John Saward, a book which our Goodreads Catholic Book Club chose as our Advent/Christmas read in 2024.  This is a devotional book meditating on the nature and implications of the nine months of Jesus conception and gestation in the Blessed Virgin Mother’s womb.  These posts will coincide nicely with this year’s Advent.

 


From the book’s Introduction:


This book is an essay in reclamation. First, with the aid of the Church’s Fathers and chief Doctors, drawing on Christian philosophy, liturgy, poetry, and iconography, it seeks to recover and reconsider a forgotten pearl from the treasury of revelation: the nine months of Jesus’ life as an unborn child in Mary. Secondly, since the Incarnation of God the Son in the Virgin’s womb reveals the greatness of man’s dignity, I am inviting my readers to look again, this time in the light of the incarnate Son of God, at the womb-weeks of their own and every human life. I am going to suggest that we re-read this first chapter of the human story and find afresh its beauty, truth, and goodness. It is only our estranged faces that have missed this many-splendored thing.

That statement of objective is split in two.  First it presents the conception and gestation of our Lord within His mother’s womb, but it also stops to meditate on the significance of the various stages leading to the birth.  I think the book is first a meditation on Christ in the womb and second a book of theology. 

A good question is how do we approach meditations?  I think we approach them knowing there are insights we glean to deepen our devotion, deepen our understanding, and deepen our faith. 

###

From Kerstin’s Introduction to Chapter 1: The Moment God Became Man:

Chapter 1 – The Moment God Became Man

…according to the Church’s teaching, we can be precise about the moment of the Incarnation: it took place when the Virgin Mary said to the angel, “Be it done unto me according to thy word” (v. 38). It was exactly then that, by the overshadowing of the Holy Spirit, a body was fashioned from the Virgin’s flesh and blood, a rational soul created and infused into the body and, in the same instant, the complete human nature united to the divine Word. There were no successive stages in this taking of manhood; the body did not come into being before the soul, nor the soul before the body, nor were either ever other than his, God the Son’s: the flesh was conceived, ensouled, and assumed simultaneously.

 

When exactly was Christ conceived in the Virgin’s womb? There was a debate in the Church from early on spanning many centuries about it as well as to when Christ’s body and soul was fully formed in the Virgin’s womb. Did he have a soul prior to conception as Origin proposed? Was there first the body and then it was infused with a soul? It was Maximus the Confessor (580 – 662) who ultimately determined that the intellectual soul is created by God and infused into the body in the very instant of conception. He teaches that man is a synthesis of body and soul. One cannot exist without the other. St. Thomas Aquinas added that Christ’s body was perfectly formed from the moment of conception. This conclusion, while wholly logical for his time, is now outdated given our current understanding of the mechanisms of conception and the developmental stages of the human baby in the womb. 

Michelle’s Comment:

Thank you, Kerstin. I really liked this from pg. 18:

 

"Maximus suggests that, were soul not wedded to body from the beginning, there would be no reason why it should not, so to speak, divorce and remarry at the end: reincarnation would be as reasonable a human destiny as resurrection."

Michael’s Comment:

I don't think that the mystery of Christ's birth can be seen only in biological or logical terms. Mary's virginity already shows us that is not a conventional conception. We're outside any other conception that has ever taken place, and any other conception that will take place between the beginning and the end of the world. Christ and his Blessed Mother are a unique and unrepeatable event.

Ellie’s Comment:

I loved the comparison of Elizabeth to King David: How can the Ark of the Lord come to me? I don't think such a similarity is accidental - nothing is accidental with the Lord, and so it's such a wonder. I also put down some notes on how Mary might be the redeeming quality of Eve. I'm not a theologian and I don't want to say the wrong thing, but still I'd like to share these two notes I made:

 

"The greatest miracle of humanity is that God came to dwell among us. And He did it through a humble woman. There is this striking difference between Eve and Mary – Mary’s obedience was absolute, even to the point of her life being in danger. She, in some sense, is the redeeming quality of Eve."

 

"Corinthians 22:15 “For as in Adam all die, so also in Christ shall all be made alive.” Can we also apply this to Eve and Mary? Mary is exempt from labour pains for her holiness, she is holy."

 

(Here I would also love to draw from Vita Consecrata by st. John Paul II. when he described how Mary is the first consecrated person - she has been, since Jesus' conception)

My Comment:

Saward makes the doctrine clear up front.

 

The coincidence of the Virginal Conception and the hypostatic union is a defined doctrine of the Catholic faith. In the words of the ‘Formula of Union’ agreed between St. Cyril of Alexandria and the Antiochene bishops in 433 and canonized by the General Council of Chalcedon in 451, “We confess the holy Virgin to be Mother of God, because God the Word was made flesh and became man and from the very moment of conception united to himself the temple he had taken from her.”

 

###

My Comment:

“This book is an essay in reclamation. First, with the aid of the Church’s Fathers and chief Doctors, drawing on Christian philosophy, liturgy, poetry, and iconography, it seeks to recover and reconsider a forgotten pearl from the treasury of revelation: the nine months of Jesus’ life as an unborn child in Mary. Secondly, since the Incarnation of God the Son in the Virgin’s womb reveals the greatness of man’s dignity, I am inviting my readers to look again, this time in the light of the incarnate Son of God, at the womb-weeks of their own and every human life. I am going to suggest that we re-read this first chapter of the human story and find afresh its beauty, truth, and goodness. It is only our estranged faces that have missed this many-splendored thing.


That statement of objective is split in two. First it presents the conception and gestation of our Lord within His mother’s womb, but it also stops to meditate on the significance of the various stages leading to the birth. I think the book is first a meditation on Christ in the womb and second a book of theology.

A good question is how do we approach meditations? I think we approach them knowing there are insights we glean to deepen our devotion, deepen our understanding, and deepen our faith.



###

My Comment:

Chapter 1 is a meditation on the conception of Christ within the Blessed Virgin’s womb. Saward goes on to say that at the very moment, that is with no lapse of time, the Blessed Mother gave her yes was the physical conception generated.

There were no successive stages in this taking of manhood; the body did not come into being before the soul, nor the soul before the body, nor were either ever other than his, God the Son’s: the flesh was conceived, ensouled, and assumed simultaneously


It was at this very moment, and again with no lapse of time, that the full nature of Christ became incarnate.

The coincidence of the Virginal Conception and the hypostatic union is a defined doctrine of the Catholic faith. In the words of the ‘Formula of Union’ agreed between St. Cyril of Alexandria and the Antiochene bishops in 433 and canonized by the General Council of Chalcedon in 451, “We confess the holy Virgin to be Mother of God, because God the Word was made flesh and became man and from the very moment of conception united to himself the temple he had taken from her.


This also provides insight as how a natural person is ensouled during typical conception. Saward takes from St. Maximus the Confessor:

One of the questions concerns the moment at which soul and body are united. Does the soul exist before the body (as the Origenists teach)? Or does the body exist before the intellectual soul (as Aristotle and the Stoics, in their different ways, teach)? Both hypotheses are to be rejected, says Maximus: the intellectual soul is created by God and infused into the body in the very instant of conception.


So when the pro-abortion crowd try to sell you that a fetus has no soul until some distant point in the gestation, you can utterly reject that out of hand. It is not what the Catholic Church teaches.

Maximus goes on to conceptualize, and again this is Catholic Church teaching, that the body and soul are integral to each other.

Maximus insists that man is not a soul using a body but a unity of body and soul, a “synthesis,” a “complete figure” (eidos holon). This “completeness” (ekplêrôsis) of the human person enjoys a physical as well as metaphysical priority. If a man is essentially
a whole, then he must be a whole from the beginning: the genesis of body and soul must be simultaneous. This soul is defined in relation to this body; that body in relation to that soul. Each must, therefore, belong to the other from the outset. After all, even after separation in death, they do not lose their reference to each other. Maximus suggests that, were soul not wedded to body from the beginning, there would be no reason why it should not, so to speak, divorce and remarry at the end: reincarnation would be as reasonable a human destiny as resurrection.


So there is a knitted relationship between one’s body and one’s soul that are linked even after death and reunited at the end of time. All of this seems to be derived from Christ’s incarnation and resurrection.

The miraculous how of Christ’s conception reveals who he is; it does not make him any the less what we are. This is the doctrine of Pope St. Leo the Great (d. 461) in his Tome. The Son of God becomes man, he says, “in a new order, generated in a new birth,” but this newness—so “singularly wonderful and wonderfully singular”—has not abolished the nature of our race.


Saward goes on to conclude:

Apart from the saving novelty of its virginal manner, the conception of Christ is in all respects like ours. For us, then, as for him, it is the moment from which we are fully and completely human, endowed with rational soul as well as body.


Some in the pro-abortion crowd will argue that St. Thomas Aquinas did not believe in that the soul was formed at conception, and this is true. Saward fully provides Aquinas’ argument that a rational being required organs to be rational, and so could not be ensouled until they had formed. On this Thomas Aquinas is wrong, and the Church has never accepted that argument.



###

Ellie Reply to My Comment:

Manny wrote: "So when the pro-abortion crowd try to sell you that a fetus has no soul until some distant point in the gestation, you can utterly reject that out of hand. It is not what the Catholic Church teaches. "

I was actually thinking exactly that!! To be Catholic is to be, first and foremost, pro-life and I love how this book subtly emphasizes. It will come up in the third chapter, too, so I don't want to get ahead, but some of the things the Church Fathers dealt with are so eerily similar to what we have to deal with in today's society, including the dignity of human life.

Kerstin’s Reply to My Comment:

Manny wrote: "This also provides insight as how a natural person is ensouled during typical conception."

There is a natural phenomenon that occurs when the two gametes join to form a new human being, there is a flash of light. With frog eggs, which are quite large and the laying and fertilizing is outside the body, one can observe it with the naked eye.

My Reply to Kerstin:

Yes, I had forgotten about that. That is true and I think represents God's involvement in the creation of life. 

###

My Comment:

One aspect of Christ’s conception that Saward does not contemplate upon is the interaction of the male and female DNA at conception. Twenty-three pairs of chromosomes come together at conception, half from the father and half from the mother. Christ’s conception did not have a human father. So what DNA did Christ have? This is something I’ve contemplated over the years, and unfortunately have not come to any conclusion. It’s too bad Saward doesn’t take this up; I would have loved to have seen some speculation. As I have thought on this, there are a myriad of possibilities that I can come up with. Here are some.

 

1. Christ could have received the female contribution from his Blessed Mother and God could have infused a divinely inspired male side. This would dovetail with Christ’s two natures.

 

2. Christ could have received the female contribution from his Blessed Mother and God could have infused the DNA of Joseph, Mary’s spouse and Christ’s foster-father as a fitting formation of their family.

 

3. Christ could not have had any human DNA and had a uniquely set of divinely inspired chromosomes.

 

4. Christ could have had some general Jewish DNA formulated from his genealogy.

 

5. Christ could have had his Blessed Mother’s DNA from the female side and King David’s from the male side. Or Abraham’s from the male side. Or Adam’s from the male side.

 

Anyone think of any other possibility? Which one do you think is most likely?



###

Ellie’s Reply:

Manny wrote: "Anyone think of any other possibility? Which one do you think is most likely?"

This is such a complicated idea and much too big for me to even attempt to unravel, but I would probably point to the Shroud of Turin or the Eucharistic miracles. The DNA found on the Shroud might have been from people touching it, but what about the blood of the miracles? It would be awesome if we could amplify the DNA samples from the blood, then the mystery would be solved, but I guess some things have to remain a mystery because they are too great for us to understand? That's my understanding.

But I think all the options you laid out, Manny, are interesting. I guess Jesus would probably have to have some DNA from the Davidic line, and subsequently, Adam's, since he is the Son of Man, completely human as well as God.

It's a wonderful question for contemplation, though!

Kerstin’s Reply:

Many years ago, when our bishop came to visit the parish, he spoke on the very same thing. He didn't know how the "missing" human father's contribution was accomplished. It is still in my memory how my immediate reaction was: we're dealing with God here, I think He can manage!

 

What was my gut reaction here? We in the West have a tendency to explore things into minute details often at the expense of the great mystery before us. Unlike our Orthodox brothers and sisters we are not very good at keeping a mystery a mystery, we have to dissect it as much as possible. Yes it is fun to play around with the possible permutations, but in the end we should not lose sight of the wonder and mystery.

Frances’s Reply to Kerstin:

Thank you for such beautiful contributions, Kerstin. I don’t remember his words in their entirety, and so this is only part of a quotation, but at the ceremony celebrating the re-opening of Notre Dame Cathedral, Gabriel Macron said that one reason the cathedral has so much significance for us is the human longing for “meaning and transcendence.’’ I think that is exactly what you are stressing in reminding us not to lose sight of ‘’the wonder and mystery” as we read.