Enjoy today's meditation on our gaze upon a loving God. ❣️
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October 23, 2024

Dear John,

 

Have you ever looked at your family and noticed how different each of you are, and yet you are all still connected as one. That is true for all of society, as well. We are each so different, yet in so many ways, we're not. Those differences are something to celebrate. Today's Pause+Pray reminds us to celebrate each person's unique gifts that they bring to our lives. Through them we can learn and grow.

 

We at Franciscan Media love sharing these spiritual resources with you as a way to help you grow your faith. And we want to continue to do so for many years to come. To help us be able to do that, we humbly ask you to consider a gift to Franciscan Media today.

 

Thank you for all the gifts you bring to the world!

 

Peace,

Susan Hines-Brigger

Executive Editor

SAINT OF THE DAY
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Saint of the Day for October 23: John of Capistrano

(June 24, 1386 – October 23, 1456)

 

Listen to Saint John of Capistrano’s Story Here

It has been said the Christian saints are the world’s greatest optimists. Not blind to the existence and consequences of evil, they base their confidence on the power of Christ’s redemption. The power of conversion through Christ extends not only to sinful people but also to calamitous events.

 

Imagine being born in the 14th century. One-third of the population and nearly 40 percent of the clergy were wiped out by the bubonic plague. The Western Schism split the Church with two or three claimants to the Holy See at one time. England and France were at war. The city-states of Italy were constantly in conflict. No wonder that gloom dominated the spirit of the culture and the times.

 

John Capistrano was born in 1386. His education was thorough. His talents and success were great. When he was 26 he was made governor of Perugia. Imprisoned after a battle against the Malatestas, he resolved to change his way of life completely. At the age of 30 he entered the Franciscan novitiate and was ordained a priest four years later.

 

John’s preaching attracted great throngs at a time of religious apathy and confusion. He and 12 Franciscan brethren were received in the countries of central Europe as angels of God. They were instrumental in reviving a dying faith and devotion.

The Franciscan Order itself was in turmoil over the interpretation and observance of the Rule of St. Francis. Through John’s tireless efforts and his expertise in law, the heretical Fraticelli were suppressed and the “Spirituals” were freed from interference in their stricter observance.

 

John of Capistrano helped bring about a brief reunion with the Greek and Armenian Churches.

 

When the Turks captured Constantinople in 1453, John was commissioned to preach a crusade for the defense of Europe. Gaining little response in Bavaria and Austria, he decided to concentrate his efforts in Hungary. He led the army to Belgrade. Under the great General John Hunyadi, they gained an overwhelming victory, and the siege of Belgrade was lifted. Worn out by his superhuman efforts, Capistrano was an easy prey to an infection after the battle. He died on October 23, 1456.

 

Reflection

John Hofer, a biographer of John Capistrano, recalls a Brussels organization named after the saint. Seeking to solve life problems in a fully Christian spirit, its motto was: “Initiative, Organization, Activity.” These three words characterized John’s life. He was not one to sit around. His deep Christian optimism drove him to battle problems at all levels with the confidence engendered by a deep faith in Christ.

 

Saint John of Capistrano is Patron Saint of:

Judge

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MINUTE MEDITATIONS
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Gaze upon a Loving God

 

To pray as a poor person is countercultural. To gaze on a God who is poor and humble is disarming. But if we desire to come to the full potential of our humanity so that we may know the truth of ourselves and the world in which we live then we must strive to be poor. Poverty in prayer is difficult but if we gaze daily upon the God of descending love, the God who comes to us in poverty and humility, then we can begin to be detached from the multiplicity of things in our lives and move toward the simplicity of the gaze.

 

For the prayer of gazing means that God becomes less an idol of our own projections (needs and desires) and more of an icon of infinite love piercing through finite reality.

 

—from the book Franciscan Prayer: Awakening to Oneness with God
by Ilia Delio, OSF

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PAUSE+PRAY
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Celebrating Each Other’s Gifts

 

Reflect

On Pentecost, wind and fire enlightened and enlivened Jesus’ first followers. They proclaimed God’s good news that included everyone and broke down the barriers that separate us from one another. We are one despite our differences. In honoring our unity in diversity, we give God glory and bring out each other’s gifts for service.

 

Pray

Spirit of restlessness, Spirit of unity,
Breathe in us, breathe on us, fill us with your energy and power.
Help us heal our nation and the planet.
Give us a spirit of unity, even as we affirm the wondrous diversity of life.
Let us be agents of reconciliation, affirming our gifts and the gifts of others
For God’s glory and the healing of the earth.
Amen.

Act

In a world of incivility and alienation, take time to see your unity and connection with everyone you encounter. Seek to be an instrument of God’s peace and reconciliation wherever you are.

 

Today's Pause+Pray was written by Bruce Epperly. Learn more here!

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