Weekend Edition - A Daily Spiritual Seed

Published: Fri, 07/15/16

A Daily Spiritual Seed
Weekend Edition: July 15-17, 2016
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Christianity and Reincarnation
  by Philip St. Romain, M.S., D. Min.
  July 28, 2016
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Can a Christian believe in reincarnation? This webinar will review evidence for and against reincarnation, history of Christian beliefs on this topic, and differences between Christian and Eastern views of liberation.
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Book of the Week
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Your Life is Worth Mine: How Polish Nuns Saved Hundreds of Jewish Children in German-occupied Poland, by Ewa Kurek. Hoppocrene Books of New York, 1997.
 
The fate of Jewish children during World War II is explored in depth by one of the “saved” Jewish children, Ewa Kurek. She helps her readers understand the Nazis’ efficient ways of meeting their murderous aims, the painful predicaments of Jewish children, and the willingness of some nuns to risk their lives to save the hunted little ones. She gives her readers fresh insights in the relationship between good and evil.

Polish nuns in over 200 religious institutions of schools, orphanages and convents saved over 1,200 Jewish children from the horrors of the Hitler regime. These nuns rescued the children even as they risked the death penalty themselves.
         
- Thanks to Sr. Irene Hartman OP for this review.
 
 
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Saint of the Week


St. Mary MacKillop: (1842-1909): July 19.


If St. Mary MacKillop were alive today, she would be a household name. It’s not that she sought the limelight. On the contrary, she simply wanted to serve the poor wherever she found them in her native Australia. But along the way, she managed to arouse the ire of some rather powerful churchmen. One even excommunicated her for a time. 

Born in Melbourne in 1842 to parents who had emigrated from Scotland, Mary grew up in a family that faced constant financial struggles. As a young woman she was drawn to religious life but could not find an existing order of Sisters that met her needs. In 1860 she met Father Julian Woods, who became her spiritual director. Together they founded a new community of women—the Sisters of St. Joseph of the Sacred Heart, also known as the Josephite Sisters. Its members were to staff schools especially for poor children, as well as orphanages, and do other works of charity.

As the congregation grew, so did Mary MacKillop’s problems. Her priest-friend proved unreliable in many ways and his responsibilities for direction of the Sisters were removed. Meanwhile, Mary had the support of some local bishops as she and her Sisters went about their work. But the bishop in South Australia, aging and relying on others for advice, briefly excommunicated Mary—charging her with disobedience—and dispensed 50 of her Sisters from their vows. In truth, the bishop’s quarrel was about power and who had authority over whom. He ultimately rescinded his order of excommunication. 

Mary insisted that her congregation should be governed by an elected mother general answerable to Rome, not to the local bishop. (There were also disputes about whether or not the congregation could own property.) In the end, Rome proved to be Mary’s best source of support. After a long wait, official approval of the congregation—and how it was to be governed—came from Pope Leo XIII. 

Despite her struggles with Church authorities, Mary MacKillop and her Sisters were able to offer social services that few, if any, government agencies in Australia could. They served Protestants and Catholics alike. They worked among the aborigines. They taught in schools and orphanages and served unmarried mothers. 

Money, actually the lack of it, was a constant worry. But the Sisters, who begged from door to door, were bolstered by faith and by the conviction that their struggles were opportunities to grow closer to God. 

By the time Mary was approaching the end of her life, the congregation was thriving. She died in 1909 at the age of 67. Pope John Paul II beatified her in 1995. In 2010, when Pope Benedict XVI canonized her, she became Australia’s first saint. ​​​​​​​

 
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