Episode 28 – Setting Your Family Ablaze – Building Faith

Listen as we discuss ways of building up the faith in your family – the first step towards setting your family ablaze.

Episode 27 – Setting Your Family Ablaze – Relationships and Evangelization

family2We discuss dealing with family and friends that may allow your child to watch objectionable material.  We also discuss how to decide on whether to allow your child to watch a particular movie using resources like www.decentfilms.com and www.pluggedin.com.  We end the show discussing the need for and importance of strong relationships in setting your family on fire in order that the world might see your good works and give glory to God.  Enjoy.

Episode 26 – Setting Your Family Ablaze: 4 Keys to Enkindling God’s Gifts in our Homes – Part 1

God provides us with many gifts – Jesus, the Holy Spirit, the Church, the Faith, the Sacraments, our children, etc., etc..  We must receive them and then stir them into a flame so that our light might so shine before men and those who see the flame may give glory to God.  Using the acronym and the image Fire, we discuss the first two letters of the acronym – F for Faith and I for Integration – and their importance in setting our homes ablaze. In today’s show,we discuss practical ways of conveying both faith in Jesus and faith in the faith He has revealed through everyday occurrences.  We also discuss how and why we, as parents, must integrate our beliefs into everyday life – that is, how and why we must live our faith openly.

Episode 25 – Building Family Unity Finale

Listen to our final show on building family unity.  We discuss the importance of adding more and more freedoms for your children as a means to building unity.  Family traditions and rituals are also discussed as important factors in creating unity at home.  How have you been able to increase family unity in your homes?  Please share.  God bless you all!

Episode 24 – Mystery of Parenthood Podcast – Building Family Unity Continued

Listen as we continue to discuss practical ways that you can implement tomorrow that will help build unity in your family.

Episode 23 – Building Unity in Your Family

During this podcast, we discuss how understanding the Mystery of Parenthood can help to build family unity.  Listen for practical tips that can be applied today in your family that will build unity and for the theology behind those tips – the Mystery of Parenthood.

Episode 22 – Mothers, Old Maids, the Church, and the Mystery of Parenthood

In this episode, we discuss Pope Francis’s call to be mothers and not “old maids”, the implications of that call for the family as the Domestic Church and for the Mystery of Parenthood.

Episode 21 – Mystery of Parenthood Podcast – Laundromats, the Holy Family, TOB, and Parenting

Who would ever think that Mystery of Parenthood could fit all of the following into one show?  Pope Francis, Laundromats, and Confession; St. Joseph and the Holy Family; and Theology of the Body and Parenting.  Check it out.

Mystery of Parenthood Podcast – Parenting in the Funnel

Listen to our Mystery of Parenthood radio show when the two of us discussed Parenting in the Funnel.  We have received many requests to have this show made into a podcast due to its practical applications throughout the parenting process.  We hope you enjoy it!

“Living Stones”, Building, and Mystery

In his short time as Pope, Francis has used the image of “living stones” several times when referring to the need for building that seems to already be a significant theme of his pontificate.  In addition to using the image in his homilies, the Pope’s choice of names and the Chair of Peter on which he sits further speak to the theme of building.  After all, St. Francis was called by Christ to “rebuild His Church”, and St. Peter was told by Christ that he would be the “Rock” on which He would build His Church.  Furthermore, the image itself comes from St. Peter, the Rock himself:

Come to him, to that living stone, rejected by men but in God’s sight chosen and precious; and like living stones be yourselves built into a spiritual house, to be a holy priesthood, to offer spiritual sacrifices acceptable to God through Jesus Christ. (I Peter 2:4-5)

Obviously, Pope Francis means this for all Christians, but I especially believe that he is speaking to families, to parents, to the domestic Church, to you and me, as the living stones which will be built up into a spiritual household, the household of God, the Church.  First, one need only look at his coat of arms to see that the family is at the center of his attention.  Jesus, Mary, and Joseph, the Holy Family, fill up the shield – the sunburst with the Greek letters, “IHS”, representing the first three letters, JES, of Jesus’ Name, the star – the symbol of Mary, and the nard flower (it looks like grapes) traditionally used to represent Joseph and his purity.  Second, a house itself tends to illicit thoughts of the place where families live.  The word “house” was chosen, not “Temple”, not “Church”.  Again, “house” makes one think of a home where husbands, wives, moms, and dads live, work, and relate to one another.  If I’m right about his speaking to families, then these images of living stones and the theme of building should be both a rich source for meditation and a guide for practical application in our living out the Mystery of our Parenthood.  Here are just a couple of thoughts that should help each of us live as and raise up “living stones” for the building up of the Church.

1) Like the Church, our domestic churches must walk with, build on, and profess Christ, and Him Crucified. As parents, we must be His disciples.  And, as disciples, Christ Crucified must be the center, the source, and the summit of our home.  Pope Francis puts it this way, “When we walk without the Cross, when we build without the Cross, and when we profess without the Cross, we are not disciples of the Lord.”  In fact, he points out that if we do not confess Jesus Christ, “nothing will avail”.  Jesus Himself says as much in the Gospel of John, “Apart from me, you can do nothing” (John 15:5).

This points us directly to the mystery that each of us live in our marriages and in our parenting.  Do we really realize that apart from Him, we can do nothing?  At (or around) our home tonight, 3 children went to 3 different practices – two baseball, one soccer FYI, while another went to a Bible Study (thank God for a teenage driver – apart from him, we might have done better than nothing, but we certainly couldn’t have done everything), everyone ate a meal (albeit prepackaged – Chicken Nuggets and Creamed Spinach – and late – finished at 9:20, but everyone ate), the dishes were cleaned, the children went to bed quietly after only one visit asking them to stop talking, I’m doing this, and Steph’s doing her devotional.  That’s far from nothing.  I imagine that a great majority of our neighbors, perhaps even you, had a similar evening.  Many of them may not even be practicing Christians.  They did something.  Something availed.  Right?

Here’s where the image of living stones helps me to understand.  Sometimes I’m just a stone, not a living stone.  Stones all look very similar and seem to be doing the same thing, but living stones are different.  When I’m, when you’re, when we’re living stones, things may look the same from the outside – baseball practice, nuggets, and dishes, but something’s different.  When we’re living stones, we have the eyes of faith to recognize the mystery – the invisible realities behind the ordinary stuff of the day-to-day.  And, without that recognition, we really have done nothing.  We’re just stones.  St. Irenaeus stated that “the glory of God is man fully alive”.  A “living stone” is fully alive.  So, does being fully alive mean that what we do is always exciting?  Does being fully alive require climbing Mount Everest or vacationing on the Riviera or eating at the finest restaurants, or traveling to far away resorts?  Or perhaps does being fully alive mean recognizing something behind the ordinary everyday stuff?  I think Stephanie, my wife and love of my life, may provide some insight into this question.  When, in our home, she sees laundry baskets full (let’s be realistic, overflowing) with clean laundry and jokingly begins to fold the clothes that make up what she calls “Mount Neverest”, she is a “living stone”.

This point brings us full circle to Jesus again, particularly in the Eucharist- the source and summit of our lives.  There, in what looks like a wafer, a cracker, is the King of Kings, the Lord of Lords, the Bread of Life.  Yet, if we only look at the outward appearances and fail to see the mystery, fail to see the Lord, fail to see the invisible because of the ordinariness of the visible, we are merely stones – stones that cannot be built into anything, stones that can do nothing.

2)  The practical application for this insight and the way in which we participate in the building that Pope Fransis calls us to is found in the second half of the quote from St. Peter above – “like living stones be yourselves built into a spiritual house, to be a holy priesthood, to offer spiritual sacrifices acceptable to God through Jesus Christ“.  The Fathers of the Second Vatican Council in the document Lumen Gentium (34) build on what Peter says:

Hence the laity, dedicated as they are to Christ and anointed by the Holy Spirit, are marvelously called and prepared so that even richer fruits of the Spirit may be produced in them.  For all their works, prayers, and apostolic undertakings, family and married life, daily work, relaxation of mind and body, if they are accomplished in the Spirit – indeed even the hardships of life if patiently born – all these become spiritual sacrifices acceptable to God through Jesus Christ.  In the celebration of the Eucharist these may most fittingly be offered to the Father along with the body of the Lord.  And so, worshipping everywhere by their holy actions, the laity consecrate the world itself to God, everywhere offering worship by the holiness of their eyes. (CCC 901, LG 34)

That offering, that “consecration of the world itself to God”, happens when we – moms, dads, husbands, wives – unite our folding of the clothes of Mount Neverest, our cooking of yummy chicken nuggets, our driving of children to baseball practice – that is, our day-to-day, ordinary events to the perfect, once for all sacrifice of “that living stone, rejected by men but in God’s sight chosen and precious” – that is, Jesus made present again in every Mass.  We offer our spiritual sacrifices “through Him, with Him, and in Him” at every Mass, if only we’ll be “living stones”.  Pope Francis points again to the value of the everyday when he stated, “with every movement of our lives, let us build!”

So, your assignment and mine going forward from our new leader is to become living stones by participating in the mystery that is our day to day lives as husbands, wives, moms, dads.  First, we must pray. We must ask God to open our eyes to see Him at work in the everyday in order that we might become fully alive, the glory of God.  Second, we need to offer our day to day in union with the living stone, with Jesus in the Mass.  When these two things begin to happen in each of our lives, the building up of the Church will be underway.  Let us build!