October 9, 2024

Regnum Christi Spirituality Center Uncle Eddy

St Cirilo Bertrán and Eight Companions, Martyrs of Turón

Dear Bert,

If your Compass chapter is really doing its job, you’re not going to be able to avoid a few potholes and speed bumps.  You just have to keep going, that’s all. Don’t get me wrong, you don’t want to be out there looking for opposition, but if it comes to you while you’re engaged in defending Christian values and truth against vociferous ideologues, you can take it as an indication that you’re on the right track.  Didn’t our Lord emphasize that those who are persecuted for righteousness sake are “blessed”? If that’s what’s happening, you can rest assured you are in good company, like that of today’s saints.

Most of them were in their early twenties; St Cirilo was the superior of 7 Christian Brothers working at a school in the mining region of Asturias, Spain.  On the fateful day of their martyrdom they were joined by a Passionist Father who had come to hear confessions – they would be his last. At the time, civil unrest was rampant in Spain.  The freemasons and the communists were dead set on grasping all power in the country and doing away with the Church, among other things. The struggle ended up producing a bloody civil war and a slew of martyrs, something you don’t read about in most USA history books (just as you don’t read about the Cristero war in Mexico in the 1920s, a direct parallel, which also produced scores – if not hundreds – of martyrs).  So one fine day some of these rebels forced their way into the Christian Brothers’ School, right about dawn, took the religious captive, imprisoned them for a time in the “House of the People”, and decided to execute them as enemies of emerging order. All nine martyrs faced death with the courage and serenity of those who had placed their lives in the hands of the Lord of the universe; none compromised their faith or betrayed their King.

I hope you don’t have to face a literal firing squad – at least, not anytime soon, but against the ideological firing squad (which can be even more brutal sometimes, I know) you may be able to derive inspiration from these brave soldiers of Christ.  Remember the old saying: God will NEVER be outdone in generosity.

Your devoted uncle, Eddy

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October 9, 2024 – Prayer Has an Important Place in Our Continuing Conversion

 

 

 

 

Wednesday of the Twenty-Seventh Week in Ordinary Time

 

 

Luke 11:1-4

 

Jesus was praying in a certain place, and when he had finished, one of his disciples said to him, “Lord, teach us to pray just as John taught his disciples.” He said to them, “When you pray, say: Father, hallowed be your name, your Kingdom come. Give us each day our daily bread and forgive us our sins for we ourselves forgive everyone in debt to us, and do not subject us to the final test.”

 

Introductory Prayer: Lord Jesus, you are the master of the universe, and yet you wish to listen to me and guide me. You know all things past, present and future, and yet you respect my freedom to choose you. Holy Trinity, you are completely happy and fulfilled on your own, and yet you have generously brought us into existence. You are our fulfillment. Thank you for the gift of yourself. I offer the littleness of myself in return, knowing you are pleased with what I have to give.

 

Petition: Lord, teach me through the “Our Father” to pray more deeply.

 

  1. Traditional Prayers Teach Us the Correct Attitudes to Have Towards God: What better prayer could we devise than a prayer using the very words Jesus taught us here? Yet the “Our Father” is a traditional prayer, a prayer with set words, prone to be recited merely by rote. But in fact, traditional prayers are an invitation to meditate, set up in a way that appeals to beginners. In the “Our Father,” as in all traditional prayers, we repeat phrases that express the essence of a correct relationship with God. Whether we already hold these attitudes in our heart or not, the beauty of traditional prayers is not what we say, but how we say it. If we pray these words, trying to make them our own, conforming our heart to the attitudes they express, then little by little we will form a Christian heart, a heart that loves the way it should.

 

  1. Traditional Prayers Can Change My Heart and Draw It to God: When I first turned to the Lord, I had a lot to work on. Most people do. I didn’t love the way I should have. I was flawed in many other ways. One of the things that helped me was the “Our Father” as well as other traditional prayers. When we first come to the Lord, we don’t know how Christians should think, what attitudes a Christian should hold. When we pray the “Our Father” from the heart, it helps our heart to change, to become more Christ-like. It takes only a moment to pray an “Our Father,” but from time to time, we should meditate on the words. Say each phrase and repeat it, not moving on to the next phrase until we feel that we have really gotten to the bottom of what it is saying.

 

  1. Traditional Prayers Fight Off the Attitudes of the World: Our conversion to Christ is a change of attitudes from those of the world to those of a Christian. Every day, the world proposes its attitudes as something good that should be lived. But often what the world proposes as good is actually harmful to us. How do we resist? By constantly repeating to myself and meditating on Christian attitudes. This is what can happen in using traditional prayers. It is a way of helping our heart understand and embrace the Christianity we profess. The Christian who disdains traditional prayers is rejecting a powerful tool of conversion.

 

Conversation with Christ: Dear Jesus, too often I rattle off my prayers without thinking about the attitudes they contain. I want to get the full benefit of all the prayers I say every day. I want to pray these prayers more often, especially the “Our Father,” since it is the prayer that you yourself taught me.

 

Resolution: Today I will pray my traditional prayers with special attention and with the conviction that they will instruct me and change me in a way that leads me closer to God.

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Alex Kucera

Atlanta

Alex Kucera has lived in Atlanta, GA, for the last 46 years. He is one of 9 children, married to his wife Karmen, and has 3 girls, one grandson, and a granddaughter on the way. Alex joined Regnum Christi in 2007. Out of the gate, he joined the Helping Hands Medical Missions apostolate and is still participating today with the Ghana Friendship Mission.

In 2009, Alex was asked to be the Atlanta RC Renewal Coordinator for the Atlanta Locality to help the RC members with the RC renewal process. Alex became a Group Leader in 2012 for four of the Atlanta Men’s Section Teams and continues today. Running in parallel, in 2013, Alex became a Team Leader and shepherded a large team of good men.

Alex was honored to be the Atlanta Mission Coordinator between 2010 to 2022 (12 years), coordinating 5-8 Holy Week Mission teams across Georgia. He also created and coordinated missions at a parish in Athens, GA, for 9 years. Alex continues to coordinate Holy Week Missions, Advent Missions, and Monthly missions at Good Shepherd Catholic Church in Cumming, GA.

From 2016 to 2022, Alex also served as the Men’s Section Assistant in Atlanta. He loved working with the Men’s Section Director, the Legionaries, Consecrated, and Women’s Section leadership teams.

Alex is exceptionally grateful to the Legionaries, Consecrated, and many RC members who he’s journeyed shoulder to shoulder, growing his relationship with Christ and others along the way. He knows that there is only one way, that’s Christ’s Way, with others!