St. Charles Borromeo: Saint of the Day for Friday, November 04, 2022

Saint Charles Borromeo was born on October 2, 1538 at the castle of Arona on Lake Maggiore near Milan. His father was the Count of Arona and his mother a member of the House of Medici. He was the third of six children born to the couple.

At the age of 12, the young Count Charles Borromeo dedicated himself to a life of service to the Church. His uncle gave to him the family income from the Benedictine abbey of Saints Gratinian and Felinus. Even as a youth, his integrity was obvious. He was …

Prayer to St. Dymphna – Perseverance: Prayer of the Day for Friday, November 04, 2022

Most faithful St. Dymphna, you remained true to your baptismal promises to the very end. You are, therefore, honored, known, and loved after 1,400 years by people you have aided all over the world. We do not know how long or short a time is left to us of this life here, but help us in any case to be faithful to God to the end. Please gain for us the grace to live one day at a time as if each were to be our last. Amen.

Inviting People In / Invitar a la Gente Entrar

What was it about Jesus that drew people near to him? I guess the whole Son of God thing must have helped. But this is something I think about often as someone who wants to evangelize as best I can. If we are called to be like Christ then I think it is worth a ponder about what made people flock to Jesus. 

In today’s Gospel, we hear that tax collectors and sinners were drawing near to Jesus. I don’t think it’s an accident that the Gospel for this past Sunday was Jesus inviting Zacchaeus to his house. Then a few verses later you have tax collectors and sinners hanging on his every word. Now, I know it’s cliche to just say Jesus was present to them. We are present to plenty of people who don’t want to talk to us or listen to what we have to say about God. But Jesus was present in a very specific way. He wanted to join in their day to day lives. 

Notice that when Jesus calls Zacchaeus he doesn’t just tell him to repent and believe. He invites himself into his very life, into his family, into his house. He wants to engage with who Zacchaeus is as a person. Now, of course, the repent and believe line was coming, but first Jesus just wanted to get to know this tax collector. And it wasn’t long before the other tax collectors started talking. 

I think about this a lot when it comes to Evangelization. I love cooking so I have been thinking about some ways that I can evangelize through the simple offering of food. We have Thanksgiving and Christmas coming up. What a perfect time to make a meal for your neighbor and invite yourself in. If for nothing else, you’ll get to meet some great people. Even better, you may get to share the reason for the hope within you. 

I challenge you and myself this coming Christmas season, that instead of buying a boring generic gift for someone you barely talk to, this time make them a meal and get to know them. Invite yourself in as Jesus did, and you may be surprised that they want to invite your story in as well. 

From all of us here at Diocesan, God bless!

Contact the author


¿Qué tenía Jesús que atraía a la gente a él? Supongo que ser el Hijo de Dios debe haber ayudado. Pero esto es algo en lo que pienso a menudo como alguien que quiere evangelizar lo mejor que pueda. Si estamos llamados a ser como Cristo, entonces creo que vale la pena reflexionar sobre lo que hizo que tantas personas acudieran a Jesús.

En el Evangelio de hoy, escuchamos que los recaudadores de impuestos y los pecadores se acercaban a Jesús. No creo que sea casualidad que el Evangelio del domingo pasado sea sobre Jesús invitando a Zaqueo a su casa. Luego, unos pocos versículos más adelante, tienes a los recaudadores de impuestos y a los pecadores pendientes de cada una de sus palabras. Ahora, sé que es un cliché decir simplemente que Jesús estuvo presente para ellos. Estamos presentes para muchas personas que no quieren hablar con nosotros o escuchar lo que tenemos que decir acerca de Dios. Pero Jesús estuvo presente de una manera muy específica. Quería unirse a ellos dentro de sus vidas cotidianas.

Vemos que cuando Jesús llama a Zaqueo, no solo le dice que se arrepienta y crea. Se invita a sí mismo a su propia vida, a su familia, a su casa. Quiere comprometerse con quién es Zaqueo como persona. Ahora, por supuesto, la línea de arrepentirse y creer estaba por venir, pero primero Jesús solo quería conocer a este recaudador de impuestos. Y no pasó mucho tiempo antes de que los otros recaudadores de impuestos comenzaran a hablar.

Pienso mucho en esto cuando se trata de la evangelización. Me encanta cocinar, así que he estado pensando en algunas formas en las que puedo evangelizar a través de la simple ofrenda de alimentos. Se acercan el Día de Acción de Gracias y la Navidad. Qué momento perfecto para preparar una comida para los vecinos y auto-invitarte a entrar. Si no es por otra cosa, podrías conocer a algunas personas muy buenas. Aún mejor, puedes llegar a compartir la razón de la esperanza dentro de ti.

Te reto a ti y a mí mismo esta próxima temporada navideña, que en lugar de comprar un regalito genérico y aburrido para alguien con quien apenas hablas, esta vez prepárale una comida y conócelo. Invítete a ti mismo como lo hizo Jesús, y te sorprenderás de que ellos también quieran compartirte su historia.

De parte de todos nosotros aquí en Diocesan, ¡Dios los bendiga!

Comunicarse con el autor

Tommy Shultz is a Business Development Representative for Diocesan. In this role he is committed to bringing the best software to dioceses and parishes while helping them evangelize on the digital continent. Tommy has worked in various diocese and parish roles since his graduation from Franciscan University with a Theology degree. He hopes to use his skills in evangelization, marketing, and communications, to serve the Church and bring the Good News to all. His favorite quote comes from St. John Paul II, who said, “A person is an entity of a sort to which the only proper and adequate way to relate is love.”

Feature Image Credit: Jed Owen, unsplash.com/photos/EgG6wcsjFtE

St. Martin de Porres: Saint of the Day for Thursday, November 03, 2022

St. Martin de Porres was born in Lima, Peru on December 9, 1579. Martin was the illegitimate son to a Spanish gentlemen and a freed slave from Panama, of African or possibly Native American descent. At a young age, Martin’s father abandoned him, his mother and his younger sister, leaving Martin to grow up in deep poverty. After spending just two years in primary school, Martin was placed with a barber/surgeon where he would learn to cut hair and the medical arts.
As Martin grew older, he …

Prayer to St. Martin de Porres: Prayer of the Day for Thursday, November 03, 2022

To you Saint Martin de Porres we prayerfully lift up our hearts filled with serene confidence and devotion. Mindful of your unbounded and helpful charity to all levels of society and also of your meekness and humility of heart, we offer our petitions to you.
Pour out upon our families the precious gifts of your solicitous and generous intercession; show to the people of every race and every color the paths of unity and of justice; implore from our Father in heaven the coming of his kingdom, …

Passing through Fire / Pasando por el Fuego

All Souls’ Day is a wonderful opportunity to pray for the dead, uniting our personal intentions to the prayers of the Mass. The month of November also gives us the opportunity for indulgences when praying for the dead. Most of us know that this is an important part of the Christian life, even a work of mercy, but suffrage for the dead has become less practiced in modern times.

In the old Requiem Mass, said at funerals, memorials of the dead, and on All Souls’ Day, the priest repeated this petition for the dead at least three times: “Eternal rest give unto them, O Lord, and let perpetual light shine upon them.” At the Offertory prayer before the preparation of the altar, the priest prayed: “Lord Jesus Christ, King of glory, deliver the souls of all the faithful departed from the pains of Hell and the bottomless pit. . . . Let the holy standard-bearer Michael lead them into the holy light. . . . Lord, in praise we offer you sacrifices and prayers, accept them on behalf of those who we remember this day: Lord, make them pass from death to life, as once you promised to Abraham and his seed.” At the Sequence before the Gospel, the faithful were reminded of the Last Judgment and implored God to spare them from damnation.

Today, we can forget that the faithful departed need our prayers. We focus on verses such as “The souls of the just are in the hand of God” and “I shall raise him on the last day” and pass over “As gold in the furnace, he proved them” and “We were indeed buried with him through baptism into death.” All of these verses are present in the options for All Souls’ Day, but sometimes we forget how important it is to pray for the dead, that God may soon grant them eternal rest.

The faithful departed do have heaven to look forward to, an eternity of union with God. But for most of them, we cannot be sure if they have arrived yet, which means that they are experiencing intense suffering in Purgatory. In Purgatory, they experience a pure love of God, but they see more clearly than ever their imperfections, and are torn apart with pain over being separated from Him. It is our prayers and sacrifices that help these faithful to be purged of their sins that keep them from embracing God.

We should still rejoice in the ultimate fate of the faithful departed, and should give praise to the Lord for His great mercy in preparing a place for the just. At the same time, we should not stop praying for them. The souls in Purgatory eagerly await the heavenly banquet, and they richly reward those who help them to get there more quickly. Such small things to us as offering a Mass or praying a Rosary on their behalf go a long way for them.

Contact the author


El Día de los Muertos es una maravillosa oportunidad para orar por los difuntos, uniendo nuestras intenciones personales a las oraciones de la Misa. El mes de noviembre también nos da la oportunidad de indulgencias al orar por los difuntos. La mayoría de nosotros sabemos que esta es una parte importante de la vida cristiana, incluso una obra de misericordia, pero el sufragio por los muertos se ha vuelto menos practicado en los tiempos modernos.

En la antigua Misa de Réquiem, dicha en los funerales, en memoria de los difuntos y en el Día de los Muertos, el sacerdote repetía esta petición por los difuntos por lo menos tres veces: “Dales el descanso eterno, oh Señor, y que brille la luz perpetua. sobre ellos.” En la oración del Ofertorio antes de preparar el altar, el sacerdote oró: “Señor Jesucristo, Rey de la gloria, libra las almas de todos los fieles difuntos de las penas del Infierno y del abismo. . . . Que el santo portaestandarte Miguel los conduzca a la luz sagrada. . . . Señor, en alabanza te ofrecemos sacrificios y oraciones, acéptalos en nombre de aquellos que recordamos este día: Señor, hazlos pasar de muerte a vida, como una vez prometiste a Abrahán y su descendencia.” En la Secuencia antes del Evangelio, se les recuerda a los fieles del Juicio Final e imploran a Dios que los librara de la condenación.

Hoy en día podemos olvidar que los fieles difuntos todavía necesitan nuestras oraciones. Nos enfocamos en versos tales como “Las almas de los justos están en la mano de Dios” y “Yo lo resucitaré en el último día” y pasamos por alto “Como oro en el horno, los probó” y “Ciertamente fuimos sepultados con él por el bautismo en la muerte.” Todos estos versículos están presentes en las opciones para el Día de los Muertos, pero a veces olvidamos lo importante que es orar por los muertos, para que Dios les conceda pronto el descanso eterno.

Los fieles difuntos están esperando entrar el cielo, una eternidad de unión con Dios. Pero para la mayoría de ellos, no podemos estar seguros si ya llegaron, y es posible que estén experimentando un intenso sufrimiento en el Purgatorio. En el Purgatorio experimentan un amor puro de Dios, pero ven más claramente que nunca sus imperfecciones y se desgarran de dolor por estar separados de Él. Son nuestras oraciones y sacrificios los que ayudan a estos fieles a ser purgados de sus pecados que les impiden abrazar a Dios.

Todavía debemos regocijarnos en el destino final de los fieles difuntos, y debemos alabar al Señor por Su gran misericordia al preparar un lugar para los justos. Al mismo tiempo, no debemos dejar de orar por ellos. Las almas del Purgatorio esperan ansiosas el banquete celestial, y recompensan ricamente a quienes las ayudan a llegar más rápidamente. Cosas tan pequeñas para nosotros como ofrecer una Misa o rezar un Rosario para ellos es una gran ayuda para sus almas.

Comunicarse con el autor

David Dashiell is a freelance author and editor in Nashville, Tennessee. He has a master’s degree in theology from Franciscan University, and is the editor of the anthology Ever Ancient, Ever New: Why Younger Generations Are Embracing Traditional Catholicism.

Feature Image Credit: Gime Salvatelli, cathopic.com/photo/12327-fuego

Daily Prayer For The Holy Souls: Prayer of the Day for Wednesday, November 02, 2022

Immortal God, holy Lord,
Father and Protector of all You have created,
we raise our hearts to You today for those
who have passed out of this mortal life.

In Your loving mercy, Father of all,
be pleased to receive them in Your heavenly company,
and forgive the failings and faults
they may have done from human frailty.

Your only Son, Christ, our Saviour,
suffered so cruelly that
He might deliver them from the second death.
By his merits may they share in the glory …

Our Heavenly Reward / Nuestra Recompensa Celestial

In today’s Gospel reading, Jesus gives us the Beatitudes. These are words we all know well. But given our political climate today and the persecution that many have faced because of their pro-life beliefs, there are a couple lines worth focusing on—lines that teach us to hope. 

Jesus tells the crowd: “Blessed are they who are persecuted for the sake of righteousness, for theirs is the kingdom of heaven. Blessed are you when they insult you and persecute you and utter every kind of evil against you falsely because of me. Rejoice and be glad, for your reward will be great in heaven.”

Having the ability to stand up for our faith and what the Church teaches is called moral courage. And moral courage is something we desperately need today. We are not born with moral courage. We must learn it; then we must practice it in all that we do.

It takes a lot of courage to speak out when others denigrate our faith. It takes courage to immerse ourselves in Church teaching and live it openly and outwardly so that others see. This is why we must constantly look to others who have lived out their courage. There are so many who either died for their faith or who devoted their lives to teaching others. We would be counting all day if we could, but let’s just highlight a few. Saints Felicity and Perpetua died in an amphitheater when they wouldn’t renounce their faith. St. Stephen was stoned to death. St. Peter was crucified upside down. St. Lawrence was grilled to death. St. Dymphna was beheaded… Their stories serve as beautiful examples when we fear speaking up for our faith.  

Many people say they feel hopeless and overwhelmed by the evils of the secular world today. Our society has no regard for human beings. Women scream for abortion “rights.” Assisted suicide laws are becoming more prevalent. Murders and violent crimes are on the rise. Road rage incidents are increasing. Smash and grab incidents are forcing stores to close. Hatred fills the news. Politicians claiming to be Catholic blatantly repudiate Church teaching. There’s so much bad news out there.

But we cannot allow that bad news to keep us from speaking out. We must protect Christ and the Church. How do we do that? We practice every day. We fill our lives with examples of holy men and women. We join groups at church. We read books that help us learn. We vote according to our pro-life beliefs. We then model our lives after these holy people by acting on that faith, always putting God first in our lives.

These are the things that will make a difference. When we do these things, our reward will indeed be great in heaven.

Contact the author


En la lectura del Evangelio de hoy, Jesús nos da las Bienaventuranzas. Estas son palabras que todos conocemos bien. Pero dado nuestro clima político actual y la persecución que muchos han enfrentado debido a sus creencias pro-vida, hay un par de líneas en las que vale la pena enfocarse, líneas que nos enseñan a tener esperanza.

Jesús le dice a la multitud: “Dichosos los perseguidos por causa de la justicia, porque de ellos es el Reino de los cielos. Dichosos serán ustedes, cuando los injurien, los persigan y digan cosas falsas de ustedes por causa mía. Alégrense y salten de contento, porque su premio será grande en los cielos”.

Tener la capacidad de defender nuestra fe y lo que enseña la Iglesia se llama valentía moral, y es algo que necesitamos desesperadamente hoy. No nacemos con valentía moral. Debemos aprenderlo y luego practicarlo en todo lo que hacemos.

Se necesita mucha valentía para hablar cuando otros denigran nuestra fe. Se necesita valentía para sumergirnos en la enseñanza de la Iglesia y vivirla abierta y exteriormente para que otros la vean. Es por eso que debemos mirar constantemente a otros que han vivido con valentía. Hay tantos que murieron por su fe o que dedicaron sus vidas a enseñar a otros. Estaríamos contando todo el día si pudiéramos, pero destaquemos solo algunos. Santas Felicidad y Perpetua murieron en un anfiteatro cuando no quisieron renunciar a su fe. San Esteban fue apedreado hasta la muerte. San Pedro fue crucificado boca abajo. St. Lorenzo fue asado a la parrilla hasta la muerte. St. Dymphna fue decapitada… Sus historias sirven como hermosos ejemplos cuando tememos que defender nuestra fe.

Muchas personas dicen que se sienten desesperanzadas y abrumadas por los males del mundo de hoy. Nuestra sociedad no tiene respeto por los seres humanos. Las mujeres gritan por los “derechos” al aborto. Las leyes de suicidio asistido son cada vez más frecuentes. Los asesinatos y los delitos violentos van en aumento. Los incidentes de ira al volante están aumentando. Los incidentes de aplastamiento y agarre están obligando a las tiendas a cerrar. El odio llena las noticias. Los políticos que se dicen católicos repudian descaradamente las enseñanzas de la Iglesia. Hay tantas malas noticias.

Pero no podemos permitir que las malas noticias nos impidan hablar. Debemos proteger a Cristo y a la Iglesia. ¿Como hacemos eso? Practicamos todos los días. Llenamos nuestras vidas con ejemplos de hombres y mujeres santos. Nos unimos a grupos en la iglesia. Leemos libros que nos ayudan a aprender. Votamos de acuerdo con nuestras creencias pro-vida. Luego modelamos nuestras vidas según estas personas santas al actuar en esa fe, siempre poniendo a Dios primero en nuestras vidas.

Estas son las cosas que instan cambios. Cuando hagamos estas cosas, nuestra recompensa ciertamente será grande en el cielo.

Comunicarse con la autora

Susan Ciancio has a BA in psychology and a BA in sociology from the University of Notre Dame, with an MA in liberal studies from Indiana University. For the past 19 years, she has worked as a professional editor and writer, editing both fiction and nonfiction books, magazine articles, blogs, educational lessons, professional materials and website content. Thirteen of those years have been in the pro-life sector. Currently Susan freelances and writes weekly for HLI, edits for American Life League, and is the executive editor of Celebrate Life Magazine. She also serves as executive editor for the Culture of Life Studies Program—an educational nonprofit program for K-12 students. You can reach her at slochner0.wixsite.com/website.

Feature Image Credit: Fernando Pérez Lara, cathopic.com/photo/9513-jesus-y-sus-discipulos

St. Valentine Berrio-Ochoa: Saint of the Day for Tuesday, November 01, 2022

Bishop and martyr of Vietnam. A native of Ellorio, Spain, he entered the Dominican Order and was sent to the Philippines. From there he went to Vietnam in 1858, serving as a vicar apostolic and titular bishop until betrayed by an apostate. He was martyred by beheading with St. Jerome Hermosilla and Blessed Peter Amato, by enemies of the Church. He was canonized in 1988 by Pope John Paul II.