Thursday 19 October 2017

Why the Morning Offering is a good habit.

October 21-22:  29th  Sunday in Ordinary Time.

Why the Morning Offering is a good habit.
Patty Knap, Aleteia

This one prayer dedicates our entire day and our entire self to God in that day ahead
The Morning Offering is an ancient prayer. A few years ago for Lent, a friend emailed me some prayers. I read that the Morning Offering is a way of giving to God the entire day ahead — the good and the bad, the trials and sacrifices, as well as the joys and blessings. I started reading it every morning and soon I had it memorized.
 
Like many Catholics I was in the habit of throwing out   individual offerings here and there during the day: 

“Okay, God, I offer up this total hassle to you…” Whether it was waiting two hours in a doctor’s office, or my son’s abandonment of his faith, or a medical problem, I’d try to remember to put the trial to good use for any number of intentions. With the Morning Offering, the whole day is “covered” in advance.

We can’t pray constantly, yet we can turn our entire day into one continuous offering through this simple prayer, starting our day by giving it to God, through His Blessed Mother. It dedicates our entire day and our entire self to God in that day ahead. We join all our efforts for God’s purpose with the Sacrifice of the Mass for the con-version of sinners, reparation for our own sins, and the souls in Purgatory. It acknowledges that each day is a gift, and expresses gratitude for our blessings and joys … all this in under three minutes! Now I’m in the habit of saying it every morning. If I’m not reading it in my daily prayer email, I can say it from memory, or even offer my own abbreviated version.
For centuries people have prayed variations of the Morning Offering. Probably one of the best known versions today is this one, composed by Father Francois Xavier Gaulrelet in 1844 for his Apostleship of Prayer ministry, which he founded that year.
        
O Jesus, through the Immaculate Heart of Mary, I offer you my prayers, works, joys, and sufferings of this day for all the intentions of your Sacred Heart, in union with the Holy Sacrifice of the Mass throughout the world, for the salvation of souls, the reparation of sins, the reunion of all Christians, and in particular for the intentions of the Holy Father this month. Amen.
Pope John Paul II once said that the practice of praying the Morning Offering is “of fundamental importance in the life of each and every one of the faithful.” It is a daily reminder to make our entire day, our whole life “a living sacrifice, holy and acceptable to God” (Romans 12:1). 
 
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Pope Francis and the Rosary:
“I want to give you some advice: Never abandon the  rosary. Never abandon the rosary. Pray the rosary, as she asked.”
These were the words of Pope Francis in a video message to the people of Portugal for the closing of the centennial of the Marian apparitions at Fatima.  The pope warmly thanked the Portuguese for their response to his trip to Portugal last May 13, and assured them that the Christian who stays close to the Virgin Mary is “like a child near his mother,” who should never be afraid. 
 
“The nation doesn’t simply need what we have. It needs what we are.” -St. Teresa Benedicta (Edith Stein)
 
“Pray as though everything depended on God. Work as though everything depended on you.”  -St. Augustine