RCT 68: “The Reception of the Eucharist.”
The Roman Catechism of Trent (RCT) p. 261-269. The Sacraments, ep. 20. -My Site: https://www.padreperegrino.org
The Roman Catechism of Trent (RCT) p. 261-269. The Sacraments, ep. 20. -My Site: https://www.padreperegrino.org
When I was a student attending a liberal Jesuit high school, I was very much against the death penalty. I even wrote letters for Amnesty International (before they had taken their pro-abortion stance) with my friends in Denver cafes at night, while other guys were out partying. Back in the early 1990s when I was in high school, I also knew of the book Dead Man Walking about an anti-death penalty sister who spent time on death row named Sr. Helen Prejean. Fast forward to the late 1990s where I am studying theology at Boston College, the second most prestigious Catholic University on the East Coast (second only to Georgetown.) [...]
It seems the current Vatican apparatus is promoting sixth commandment sins committed contra naturam even more than even the last Vatican regime. Of course, that last sentence seems impossible for real Catholics who just endured the last decade of dogmatic madness issuing from Rome. But it's obvious the current agenda is even more pronounced than the last one. (Consider the Chicago-based male-couple just brought in to be personal chefs at the Vatican's new Laudato Sí restaurant.) A few Catholics might be thinking (especially after this much brainwashing and gaslighting from the Vatican over the past 14 years) that perhaps the traditional teaching on the commandments is just too hard in [...]
-Fr. David Nix continues “Peregrino Ignatian Pathways” (PIP) # 7: Rules no. 13 and 14 in the discernment of spirits from the Spiritual Exercises of St. Ignatius of Loyola. -The Suscipe prayer of St. Ignatius: “Take, Lord, receive all my liberty, my memory, my understanding, and my entire will. All I have and call my own, You have given all to me. To You, Lord, I return it. Everything is Yours: do with it what You will. Give me only Your love and Your grace, that is enough for me.” -Donate: https://www.padreperegrino.org/donate/
Guest Post: One of the evangelization tracts I keep in my truck is a small pamphlet called: Suffering: How to make the greatest evil in our lives our greatest happiness. It was written by Fr. Paul O'Sullivan, an Irish Dominican born in 1871 (seen in the above picture.) Yes, yes, I know—your eyes probably just glazed over at the notion of reading about suffering from a Dominican from the 19th century. You already know what he's going to say? But there's a reason I keep this in my truck. It brings tremendous meaning to both Catholics and non-Catholics who are suffering (every person on the planet) so I encourage you [...]