CATHOLIC FAITHWATCH: “[Saint John Paul II on the Parable of the Prodigal Son and the Merciful Father -] General Audience, Sept. 8, 2019” – VaticanVa

Saint Pope John Paul II file photo, adapted from image at archives.gov

“… God’s Forgiveness is revealed through Jesus’ Words and Deeds. In pardoning sins, Jesus shows the Face of God the Merciful Father. … The high point of this revelation can be considered the sublime parable … usually called ‘the prodigal son’ … which should be called ‘the Merciful Father’ … God’s Attitude is presented in terms that are truly overwhelming in comparison with human criteria …. Leaving the father’s house clearly expresses … sin as an act of ungrateful rebellion with … humanly painful consequences.  … the father, catching sight of him while still a long way off, runs to meet him full of compassion (or better, ‘inwardly moved with pity,’ as the Greek text literally says: Lk 15: 20), embraces him lovingly and wants everyone to celebrate with him.

… legalism is surpassed by the father’s generous and gratuitous love …. Forgiveness consists not only in taking [the prodigal son] back … but also … the joy of restored communion, bringing him from death to life. … The merciful Father who embraces the prodigal son is the definitive icon of God revealed by Christ. First and foremost He is Father. It is God the Father who extends his arms in blessing and forgiveness, always waiting ….  [Jesus] has been sent to manifest the Father’s mercy. This is the mercy that shines brightly especially on Golgotha, in the sacrifice offered by Christ for the forgiveness of sins ….”

Click here for: “[Saint John Paul II on the Parable of the Prodigal Son and the Merciful Father -] General Audience, Sept. 8, 2019” – VaticanVa


This Angelus also was the subject of the following Vatican Information Service press release from 1999:

GOD SHOWS HIS MERCY IN PARDONING SINS

VATICAN CITY, SEP 8, 1999 (VIS) – In this morning’s general audience held in St. Peter’s Square, the Holy Father, continuing his reflections on the meaning of conversion, spoke of the significance of the remission of sins which is offered through sacramental meditation.

If, said the Pope, forgiveness of sin in the Old Testament “does not attenuate man’s responsibility and the need for his commitment to conversion,” in the New Testament “God’s forgiveness is manifested through the words and deeds of Jesus. In forgiving sin, Jesus reveals to us the merciful face of the Father.”

John Paul II confirmed that the “pinnacle of this revelation may be considered as being the parable which is known as the ‘prodigal son’ but which should be called the ‘merciful father.'”

“The decision of the younger son to liberate himself (from his father) … is a blatant rejection of family communion. The distancing from the paternal home well expresses the meaning of sin and its character of ungrateful rebellion.” Human logic, expressed in the elder brother’s protest, would suggest “adequate punishment.” Nonetheless, the Pope continued, the father goes out to meet the prodigal son and shows him his love. “Pure legality is overcome by generous and unconditional parental love, which goes beyond human justice and summons both brothers to sit once more at the father’s table.”

“The merciful father of the parable both contains within himself and transcends all the attributes of paternity and maternity. … The mystery of the ‘return home’ admirably expresses the meeting between the Father and humanity, between mercy and misery, in a circle of love that does not only concern the lost son but extends to all.”

AG;FORGIVENESS SINS;…;…;VIS;19990908;Word: 280;
Published by VIS – Holy See Press Office – Wednesday, September 08, 1999

[the press release included the following notice:
Copyright © VIS – Vatican Information Service
In accordance with international regulations on Intellectual Property and Author’s Rights, VIS authorises reproduction of news items issued by the Vatican Information Service, partially or in their entirety, on condition that the source (VIS – Vatican Information Service) is quoted.]

View of St. Peter's Basilica at Vatican from River

[featured images are file photos]

CATHOLIC VIDEO: “Mount Tabor and the Feast of the Transfiguration” – Franciscan Media

Mount Tabor file photo, adapted from image at loc.gov, adapted by Steve Welsh, stevencwelsh.info

“Franciscan Media presents a look at Mount Tabor and the Church of the Transfiguration, site of the Transfiguration of Jesus, when Jesus was transformed in appearance with His Face Shining like the sun and His clothing dazzling like light; when Jesus conversed with Moses and Elijah; and when the Voice of God the Father came from a dazzling cloud, saying, ‘This is My Beloved Son, with Whom I AM well pleased; listen to Him,’ all before the eyes of the Apostles Peter, James and John. …”

CATHOLIC FAITHLINK: “Homily: Sixth Sunday of Easter 2012 – St. Anselm’s Abbey” – Fr. Christopher

Holy Trinity and Scenes From Scripture

“… The source of all love, of course, is Divine Love, Trinitarian Love. God Who is Love could not contain that love within the Trinitarian Unity. It burst forth into a creation, every part of which God pronounced very good. God even made creatures in his own image and likeness. The whole of creation is meant to mirror and give glory to all the perfections in the creator: unity, beauty, truth, goodness, holiness, power and majesty. …”

CATHOLIC FAITHLINK: “On the Paradoxical Connection Between Love and Law – A Homily for the 6th Sunday of Easter” – Archdiocese of Washington/Msgr. Charles Pope

Christ the King Historic Image Print For Planned Stained Glass Window, adapted from image at loc.gov

“In the Sunday Gospel, Jesus cuts right through the modern Western tendency to place love in opposition with law, and law in opposition with joy. Jesus joins all three concepts and summons us to a new attitude. …”

CATHOLIC FAITHWATCH: “[Jesus is the Vine, We Are the Branches;] Pope Benedict XVI, Fifth Sunday of Easter, Regina Caeli 2012” – VaticanVa

Jesus and Mary Magdalene After Resurrection, adapted from image at loc.gov

“… Jesus said to His Disciples, ‘I am the true vine, and my Father is the vinedresser’ … The True Vine of God, True Life, is Jesus who with His Sacrifice of Love gives us Salvation, opens to us the way to be part of this vine. … as Jesus remains in the Love of God the Father, the Disciples too, wisely pruned by the Word of the Master … if they remain profoundly united in Him … become Fruitful Branches that bear an abundant Harvest. St Francis de Sales wrote: ‘The vine-sprig, united and joined to the stock, brings forth fruit not by its own power but in virtue of the stock. … we are united by charity unto our Redeemer as members to their head, and hence it is that … good works, drawing their worth from Him, merit Life Everlasting” (Treatise on the love of God, XI, 6). * * * … each one of us is like a branch that only lives if its union with the Lord grows every day in prayer, in participation in the Sacraments and in charity. … Let us pray to the Mother of God that … all our actions may have their beginning and end in [Jesus].”

Click here for: “Pope Benedict XVI, Fifth Sunday of Easter, Regina Caeli 2012” – VaticanVa

View of St. Peter's Basilica at Vatican from River

 

 

CATHOLIC FAITHLINK: “The Enduring Love of God – A Homily for the 4th Sunday of Lent”- Archdiocese of Washington/Msgr. Charles Pope

Holy Trinity and Scenes From Scripture

“The readings from Sunday Mass speak to us of our desperate condition and how God’s abiding love has not only set us free but has lifted us higher as well. God was not content to restore us to some earthly garden, paradise though it was. No, He so loved the world that He sent His Son, who opened Heaven itself for us and has given us a new, transformed, and eternal life. …”

CATHOLIC FAITHWATCH: “Feast of the Transfiguration of the Lord, Homily of His Holiness Saint John Paul II, 21st Anniversary of the Death of Paul VI, Friday, 6 August 1999” – vatican.va 8.6.99

Saint Pope John Paul II file photo, adapted from image at archives.gov

“Today, the Eucharist which we are preparing to celebrate takes us in spirit to Mount Tabor together with the Apostles Peter, James and John, to admire in rapture the splendour of the transfigured Lord. In the event of the Transfiguration we contemplate the mysterious encounter between history, which is being built every day, and the blessed inheritance that awaits us in heaven in full union with Christ, the Alpha and the Omega, the Beginning and the End. 

We, pilgrims on earth, are granted to rejoice in the company of the transfigured Lord when we immerse ourselves in the things of above through prayer and the celebration of the divine mysteries. But, like the disciples, we too must descend from Tabor into daily life where human events challenge our faith. On the mountain we saw; on the paths of life we are asked tirelessly to proclaim the #Gospel which illuminates the steps of believers. …”

Click here for: “Feast of the Transfiguration of the Lord, Homily of His Holiness Saint John Paul II, 21st Anniversary of the Death of Paul VI, Friday, 6 August 1999” – vatican.va 8.6.99

[featured images are file photos]

View of St. Peter's Basilica at Vatican from River

 

CATHOLIC VIDEO: “Mount Tabor and the Feast of the Transfiguration” – Franciscan Media

Mount Tabor file photo, adapted from image at loc.gov, adapted by Steve Welsh, stevencwelsh.info

“Franciscan Media presents a look at Mount Tabor and the Church of the Transfiguration, site of the Transfiguration of Jesus, when Jesus was transformed in appearance with His Face Shining like the sun and His clothing dazzling like light; when Jesus conversed with Moses and Elijah; and when the Voice of God the Father came from a dazzling cloud, saying, ‘This is My Beloved Son, with Whom I AM well pleased; listen to Him,’ all before the eyes of the Apostles Peter, James and John. …”

CATHOLIC FAITHLINK: “Becoming a True Image of God; Sermon for the 22nd Sunday after Pentecost, 2-5 ; Opera omnia 8, 335” – Saint Lawrence of Brindisi / DailyGospel

Christ the King Historic Image Print For Planned Stained Glass Window, adapted from image at loc.gov

“… ‘Therefore give to Caesar what belongs to Caesar and to God what belongs to God.’ We are to give back to each their due. Now this is a saying that is truly full of wisdom and heavenly understanding because it teaches us that there are two sorts of power, one earthly and human, the other heavenly and divine… * * * We have been created in the Image and Likeness of God (Gn 1:26). …. From now on if I ask with Christ: ‘Whose image and inscription are these?’, you reply: ‘God’s’. And I answer: ‘So why do you not give back to God what is His?’ If we truly want to be God’s image then we must resemble Christ, since he is the Image of God’s Goodness and ‘the very imprint of His Being” (Heb 1:3). ….”

CATHOLIC FAITHLINK: “[‘Obedient to the Father in the footsteps of the Son’] Meditation for the Feast of the Exaltation of the Cross” – Saint Teresa Benedicta of the Cross [Edith Stein]/ Institute of Carmelite Studies/ DailyGospel

Cross Atop Rocky Cliff

“‘Your will be done!’ (Mt 6,10). This was the content of the Savior’s life. He came into the world to fulfill the Father’s will, not only to atone for the sin of disobedience through his obedience (Rom 5,19), but also to lead people back to their destiny by the way of obedience.

The created will is not destined to be free to exalt itself. It is called to come into unison with the divine will. If it freely submits itself to this unison, then it is permitted in freedom to participate in the perfection of creation. If a free creature declines this unison, it lapses into bondage. The human will continues to retain the possibility of choice, but it is constrained by creatures that pull and pres­sure it in directions straying from the development of the nature desired by God, and so away from the goal toward which it itself was directed by its original freedom. With the loss of this original freedom, it also loses security in making decisions. It becomes unsteady and wavering, buf­feted by doubt and scruples or obdurate in its error. …”

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