Our Saint of the Day is the mother of another saint: Augustine. 🙏
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December 10, 2024

Dear John,

 

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Today’s Blessed, Adolf Kolping, reminds us of the dignity of work and of workers. Our ability to work, to create and to produce, are rooted in our divine dignity as human beings. When we work, we imitate God the Father, who began to reveal himself by creating, and who continues to reveal himself by working within his creation. Like a potter with clay, God works with each of us—forming us. Like a shepherd, God works with us—calling us and leading us. 

mhalbach

With profound gratitude, 

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Deacon Matthew Halbach, PhD
President & Publisher,

Franciscan Media

SAINT OF THE DAY
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Saint of the Day for December 10: 
Adolph Kolping

(December 8, 1813 – December 4, 1865)

 

Listen to Blessed Adolph Kolping’s Story Here

The rise of the factory system in 19th-century Germany brought many single men into cities where they faced new challenges to their faith. Father Adolph Kolping began a ministry to them, hoping that they would not be lost to the Catholic faith, as was happening to workers elsewhere in industrialized Europe.

 

Born in the village of Kerpen, Adolph became a shoemaker at an early age because of his family’s economic situation. Ordained in 1845, he ministered to young workers in Cologne, establishing a choir, which by 1849 had grown into the Young Workmen’s Society. A branch of this began in St. Louis, Missouri, in 1856. Nine years later there were over 400 Gesellenvereine—workman’s societies—around the world. Today this group has over 450,000 members in 54 countries across the globe.

 

More commonly called the Kolping Society, it emphasizes the sanctification of family life and the dignity of labor. Father Kolping worked to improve conditions for workers and greatly assisted those in need. He and St. John Bosco in Turin had similar interests in working with young men in big cities. He told his followers, “The needs of the times will teach you what to do.” Father Kolping once said, “The first thing that a person finds in life and the last to which he holds out his hand, and the most precious that he possesses, even if he does not realize it, is family life.”

 

Blessed Adolph Kolping and Blessed John Duns Scotus are buried in Cologne’s Minoritenkirche, originally served by the Conventual Franciscans. The Kolping Society’s international headquarters are located across from this church.

Kolping members journeyed to Rome from Europe, America, Africa, Asia, and Oceania, for Father Kolping’s beatification in 1991, the 100th anniversary of Pope Leo XIII’s revolutionary encyclical “Rerum Novarum”—“On the Social Order.” Father Kolping’s personal witness and apostolate helped prepare for that encyclical. His liturgical feast is celebrated on December 4.

 

Reflection

Some people thought that Father Kolping was wasting his time and talents on young working men in industrialized cities. In some countries, the Catholic Church was seen by many workers as the ally of owners and the enemy of workers. Men like Adolph Kolping showed that was not true.

Discover Franciscan solutions

for modern ecological challenges

in this updated classic by Keith Douglass Warner, OFM, Ilia Delio, OSF and

Pamela Wood.

 

Care for Creation: A Franciscan Spirituality of the Earth

Learn more!
Care for Creation
MINUTE MEDITATIONS
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Advent with the Saints: Monica

 

Advent is a season of waiting. The Scriptures fill us with hope, based on the promises of God. Many of these promises describe healing, comfort, a return to God. Today’s first reading urges the prophet to comfort God’s people, to tell them their suffering is at an end. They are to make ready to welcome God’s coming in both power and gentleness.

 

One saint who models both an expectant waiting and the strength and gentleness of a mother is St. Monica. This fourth-century Christian woman was married to a pagan with a fierce temper and immoral ways. His household included a bad-tempered mother-in-law. Monica is best known for her long years of prayer, waiting for the conversion of her son, Augustine. Her prayers were answered for her son, as well as for her husband and mother-in-law!

 

Augustine’s conversion took the longest—thirty-three years. He became a Christian, a bishop, and one of the greatest Christian teachers. Monica’s perseverance and example of faith-filled waiting saw her lifelong dream fulfilled. Like the shepherd who searches for the one lost sheep out of a hundred, Monica reminds us of how much our God seeks us out and longs for our return.

 

—adapted from the book Advent with the Saints: Daily Reflections
by Greg Friedman, OFM

Rediscover our sacred bond with Creation in this updated classic!

And learn more about Laudato Si: On Care for our Common Home | USCCB.

Care for Creation: A Franciscan Spirituality of the Earth

Learn more!
Care for Creation
PAUSE+PRAY
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Prayer for Heavy Hearts

 

Reflect

In Matthew 6:34, it reads: “Do not worry about tomorrow; tomorrow will take care of itself.” Sage words, but how often do we fail to entrust the future to God? How quickly do we worry about what we cannot control?

 

Pray

God of love,
I struggle to greet the day sometimes 
because I am weighed down with worry.
In this uncertain world, I crave assurance.
In these unsteady times, I long for stability.
Let me breathe in your spirit, and hold it within me.
Let me exhale and remember that every breath is a gift.
Every morning is a blessing.
Every hour is an opportunity to find you.
And with that, I need not worry.
Amen.

 

Act

Share this prayer with somebody who struggles with anxiety. Remind them that God is at the wheel. We need only enjoy the ride.

 

Today’s Pause+Pray was written by Christopher Heffron. Learn more here!

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