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Showing posts with label bible. Show all posts
Showing posts with label bible. Show all posts

Thursday, January 2, 2014

Old Testament Resolutions in 2014

Happy New Year!

January 2nd is a good day to talk about New Year's resolutions. Most of us are back to work or school and our ability to make changes for the year is far more realistic. So what does 2014 hold for us as Christians, Catholics and seekers of God? Losing ten pounds? Working out? Quitting smoking? Maybe. Are these the things that the Lord requires of us? Maybe, but let's not let the demands of culture dictate our resolutions this year. Let's look to the Lord.

Only in God do we fine newness and truth. When we look to God to effect conversion in our lives, we cannot be disappointed. That's our problem every year. We try to change ourselves to be better in the eyes of society, instead of turning ourselves over to God to be changed into something pleasing in the eyes of the Lord.

So what does God require of us in the new year? We don't need to look any further than the Scriptures.

Micah 6:8 (NRSV) says:
He has told you, O mortal, what is good;
and what does the Lord require of you
but to do justice, and to love kindness,
and to walk humbly with your God?
The New International Version translates it as "to act justly and to love mercy and to walk humbly with your God", and that translation may be more familiar to you. Let's think about some resolutions based on these three simple requirements of God.

Act Justly

In our day to day lives it is easy to not only forget those who are not treated justly in society, but also to forget the part we play in that. This year, identify a group of oppressed people and offer your year to them. Remember them in your prayers and make a real change in their interest.
  • Maybe it is victims of human trafficking and slavery (btw, January is Human Trafficking Awareness Month). Around the world, people are forced into labor to create goods that people thoughtlessly consume (including you and I, sometimes). Women and children are sold into sexual slavery, children in West Africa are sold as slaves to work on chocolate plantations, and entire families in South Asia are held as slaves in collateral against loans.  Boycott companies that you know participate in slavery or forced labor. Buy fair trade and local goods that you can trust. Learn more about slavery in the 21st century.
  • Maybe it's women, children or minorities and immigrants. Support businesses that uphold the interests of the "widow, the orphan and the stranger", those three groups God commands us to serve and protect throughout the Old Testament. Volunteer at a local women's shelter or orphanage, and support just, fair and charitable immigration reform.
  • In addition to major commitments like the above, make some personal changes too. Examine the prejudices in your life. Rid your language of sexism, racism or any other kind of hate. Treat your family justly. Be truthful at school and work. Make a point to give credit where credit is due.

Love Mercy

How can we show mercy to those in our lives? One of the most important ways we love is by showing mercy to people around us. Most people in our lives are aching for mercy, and we can each give it to them.
  • Turn the conflicts in your life over to God, and ask for the grace to forgive. Some hurts are too painful for us to attempt to forgive them on our own, and God offers to take on those burdens. Let go of grudges - especially the ones you can't remember the causes of. Say prayers for people you've spent time and energy resenting.
  • Be understanding when someone is occasionally rude or annoying. Don't let their rudeness result in bitterness from you and thus start a vicious cycle. Just let it go. Who knows, your mercy may help to heal whatever caused them to be rude in the first place.
  • Be fair with your family. Don't disproportionately punish your kids or spouse for wrong doing. Don't be afraid to communicate when something really disappoints you, but let forgiveness and mercy be what dictates your encounters.
  • Spend time in prayer for people who try your patience. Then take that a step further and spend physical time with them as well. Make a point to compliment them. Sometimes people who try our patience are caustic or difficult precisely because they have been rejected by others. Sometimes all they need is a little mercy and acceptance.
  • Stop judging people.

Walk humbly

Probably the most important thing God requires of us is humility. God so loved us that God humbled Godself and took on human form. Jesus' ultimate act of power was one of radical humility: death on a cross. It was through humility that Christ destroyed death and sin; not boasting and arrogance.
  • Part of what gets in the way of humility is our sense of entitlement to certain indulgences. This is where losing ten pounds or quitting smoking may come in. God has given us our bodies so that we will care for and steward them. Out of "pride of ownership" do we abuse them through sloth or gluttony or lust? This year, identify an indulgence that you think gets in the way of your humility (maybe something you give up for Lent year after year?), and try and kick the habit entirely.
  • Is there an area in your life through which you boast your personal circumstances? Perhaps the clothes you wear or the gadgets you use show off your wealth or success. Perhaps your social media account has become less about communication with friends and family and more about sounding off about yourself. Think about that personal area of temptation for you and see if you can counteract it. Can you limit your time on social media, or limit yourself to only one platform? Can you try to shop at second hand stores for part of your wardrobe? Can you limit yourself to one device?
  • We never do anything on our own. Most importantly, of course, we never do anything without God's help. But we also rarely do anything without the help of someone near us. Part of the "American dream" is a type of individualism that boasts starting from nothing and building one's own success. The reality is that this is a myth. We don't build our own successes. We are helped by our parents, our communities, our parishes and our local and state government. When we achieve something at work or at school, we almost always have someone else to thank for that success. Start meditating on your need for other people in all areas of your life. And when you're praised for your successes, start sharing the credit. You didn't do it alone.

 




Tuesday, September 28, 2010

Former Goldman Sachs VP-Turned-Missionary Will Appear on CatholicTV Talk Show


On October 15th, Christine Lott will appear on the CatholicTV talk show “This is the Day”.

Christine worked as a Vice President for the investment firm Goldman Sachs for 25 years before starting a non-profit called Chris Cares International (CCI) which is currently working to build a school in Tanzania. CCI recently found a plot of land for the future school.

Christine will share her story during an interview on This is the Day.

This is the Day airs at 10:30AM ET at CatholicTV.com and on CatholicTV cable outlets. The show is rebroadcast at 7:30PM and other times during the week.
Also to be discussed on This is the Day will be the Catholic Family Connections Bible (CFCB). This unique Bible is meant be used by families and includes activities which involve the entire family and encourage putting the faith into practice. This interview will be conducted about one-month prior to National Bible Week 2010 which will be celebrated Sunday, November 21 through Sunday, November 28. National Bible Week is the National Bible Association’s signature event which has been celebrated the week of Thanksgiving every year since 1941. The goal of National Bible Week is to raise awareness of the Bible’s importance and relevance to our nation as a whole, as well as in the lives of individuals.

General Editor of CFCB, John Vitek will discuss this unique Bible on This is the Day. The CFCB uses the standard Catholic NAB bible and includes articles which explain Catholic doctrine and social teaching. The CFCB also includes the Sunday Mass readings as well.

John Vitek serves as the chief executive officer and president of Saint Mary’s Press. He and his wife, Caer, have three children. Their fourth child, daughter Brianna, was in a fatal car accident at the age of 16. John and his wife live on their small-acre farm where they grow and harvest certified organic grass hay, restore native prairie, and have operated a champion llama breeding program.

More information about the CFCB can be found at http://www.smp.org/ItemDetail.cfm?ItemNum=4402.

More info about CCI http://chriscares.org

Friday, August 27, 2010

Catholic Bible Study System Endorsed By American Cardinal To Be Discussed on Live CatholicTV Talk Show


On September 10th, The Great Adventure (TGA), a unique Catholic Bible learning system will be discussed on the live CatholicTV talk show “This is the Day”. Cardinal Francis George, Archbishop of Chicago said of TGA, “The canonical approach that The Great Adventure employs is a marvelous way to introduce the faithful to salvation history.”

This is the Day airs at 10:30AM ET at CatholicTV.com and on CatholicTV. The show is rebroadcast at 7:30PM.

TGA is unique because it “makes the complex simple by teaching the story (the narrative) of the Bible.” TGA follows the principles prescribed in the Catechism of the Catholic Church and Dei Verbum (The Second Vatican Council’s Dogmatic Constitution on Divine Revelation).

Jeff Cavins, who helped to create TGA, and his wife Emily will discuss TGA on This is the Day. Over the past several years, Jeff has dedicated his life to developing TGA.

Jeff Cavins is the director of the Archbishop Harry J. Flynn Catechetical Institute based in St. Paul, Minnesota. He has been recognized both nationally and internationally as an exciting public speaker who has a deep love for Jesus Christ and who communicates his zeal with clarity and enthusiasm. Emily Cavins is the author of My Heart Is a Violin: The Autobiography of Renowned Violinist/Composer and Holocaust Survivor Shony Alex Braun and co-editor of Amazing Grace for Mothers. She is the developer of the “Great Adventure Kids” bible study materials that center around teaching children the plan of salvation history based upon The Great Adventure (for adults) bu Jeff Cavins.

Monday, May 24, 2010

Jeff Cavins To Be Interviewed on This is the Day, CatholicTV’s Talk Show


On June 1st, Jeff Cavins, will appear on the CatholicTV talk show “This is the Day”.

Jeff Cavins is the director of the Archbishop Harry J. Flynn Catechetical Institute based in St. Paul, Minnesota. Jeff has been recognized both nationally and internationally as an exciting public speaker who has a deep love for Jesus Christ and who communicates his zeal with clarity and enthusiasm. Jeff will be a featured speaker at the upcoming National Catholic Bible Conference in Denver, Colorado.

This is the Day airs at 10:30AM ET at CatholicTV.com and on CatholicTV. The show is rebroadcast at 7:30PM.

Over the past several years, Jeff has dedicated his life to developing The Great Adventure, the extremely useful and practical interactive Bible study system that enables students to understand the chronological flow of the Scriptures. Jeff received an MA in theology from Franciscan University of Steubenville.

Jeff has written several books published through Ascension Press and is currently the President of the Great Adventure Company and the Director of the Archbishop Harry J. Flynn Catechetical Institute based at the St. Paul Seminary.

The NCBC has been designed to equip you with the skills needed to read, understand, and proclaim Sacred Scripture. This annual event allows you to spend time with, and learn from, some of the most effective biblical scholars today as they share the keys to unlocking the riches of the Bible.

More information on the National Catholic Bible Conference can be found at: http://www.catholicbibleconference.com/Default.aspx

Tuesday, March 30, 2010

Bible Scholar Fr. Thomas Stegman Will Be Interviewed Live on CatholicTV


On April 9th, Fr. Thomas Stegman, S.J., author of “Second Corinthians:Catholic Commentary on Sacred Scripture (Baker Academic, 2009), will be interviewed on the live CatholicTV talk show “This is the Day”.
This is the Day airs at 10:30AM ET at CatholicTV.com and on CatholicTV. The show is rebroadcast at 7:30PM.

Fr. Stegman is an Associate Professor at Boston College School of Theology and Ministry where he teaches several courses including a course on the New Testament.

He studied at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln, St. Charles Borromeo Seminary (Philadelphia), Marquette University, Weston Jesuit School of Theology, and Emory University, where he received his doctorate in New Testament Studies.

A member of the Wisconsin Province of the Society of Jesus (the Jesuits) since 1985, he regularly presides and preaches at local parishes and has offered several Ignatian retreats throughout the country.

Fr. Stegman is the author of The Character of Jesus: The Linchpin to Paul’s Argument in 2 Corinthians (Pontificio Istituto Biblico, 2005).

CatholicTV airs several programs which explore scripture and the Catholic faith and some of these include (but are not limited to):

The Prophets and You with Dr. John Clabeaux http://www.catholictv.com/shows/default.aspx?seriesID=152

Prayer in the Catechism with Fr. Benedict Groeschel, CFR http://www.catholictv.com/shows/default.aspx?seriesID=122

Episodes of This is the Dayare posted on the site’s archives starting the same night of the broadcast day. All videos at the website are viewable in full-screen. Paste this URL into your browser in order to access the “This is the Day” video archives. http://www.CatholicTV.com/shows/default.aspx?seriesID=72


Monday, February 1, 2010

A Catholic Bible Made Especially For Families To Be Discussed on CatholicTV Talk Show



On February 5th, the “Catholic Faith and Family Bible” will be discussed on the CatholicTV talk show “This is the Day”. This new bible is the first of its kind and includes commentary and footnotes especially designed for families and uses the NRSV bible approved for study by the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops (USCCB).

This episode will air on CatholicTV.com and on CatholicTV at 10:30AM ET on February 5th.

Leif Kehrwald will be interviewed on “This is the Day” and he will discuss the Catholic Faith Family Bible, developed by The Center for Ministry Development, in partnership with
Our Sunday Visitor. Leif is the Project Coordinator of Family and Intergenerational Ministry Services at the Center for Ministry Development.

Also to be discussed on “This is the Day” on February 5th will be the upcoming Rhode Island Catholic Men’s Conference and the Religious Educator’s Conference. The Men’s Conference will feature speakers Cardinal Séan O’Malley, Archbishop of Boston (MA), and Bishop Thomas Tobin, the Bishop of Providence, Rhode Island. Lisa Gulino will be in the CatholicTV studios to discuss the upcoming conferences. She is the Director of the Diocese of Providence Office of Religious Education.

The Center for Ministry Development provides training, resources, and consultation for pastoral ministry and catechesis. Their website can be found at http://www.cmdnet.org/