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Today's Pro-Life Reflection
(From Frank Pavone's Pro-Life Reflections for Every Day) 
April 24
"You have died, and your life is hidden with Christ in God" (Colossians 3:3)
Reflection: On Easter, many throughout the world are baptized into the Church, and those already baptized renew the vows of their baptism.
By baptism, we are immersed in the new life of Christ. Thanks to baptism, God looks at us through the eyes of His Son, and says, 'You are my child; you died on the cross, therefore you will rise from the dead.'
Prayer: Father, thank you for immersing me into the death and resurrection of your Son! Thank you for making me part of the People of Life!
    

Deacons For Life
PO Box 236695
Cocoa, FL 32923
Phone: 321-500-1000



Twenty-Second Sunday in Ordinary Time - Cycle A

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General Intercessions: [English PDF]
 

Celebrant: Trusting that God knows our desires and needs, we bring to Him in a spirit of sincere humility, the needs of the world and ourselves.

Deacon/Lector:

For those who lead the people of God that they may seek after integrity and be true to their call to service, we pray to the Lord...

That those who defend and promote abortion may be transformed by the renewal of their minds, and always defend the right of every person to life, we pray to the Lord...

For blessing on all God’s priests, that they will more and more be conformed to the radiant image of God’s Son and inspire many to offer their lives in the service of the Church, we pray to the Lord..

For young people to learn to love charity, justice, and a gentle spirit, we pray to the Lord...

For all those who suffer in body, mind or spirit that they may be cared for with gentleness and patience, we pray to the Lord...

Celebrant:

Giver of all life,
We ask you to sustain our life
And the life of the world.
Hear our cries for help.
Make us as generous as you are
Iin answering those who turn to you.
We ask this in the name of Jesus the Lord.

Bulletin Insert:
 

Pope Francis: Church Cannot Abandon Human Life

"Reason alone is sufficient to recognize the inviolable value of each single human life, but if we also look at the issue from the standpoint of faith, “every violation of the personal dignity of the human being cries out in vengeance to God and is an offence against the creator of the individual” (John Paul II, Christifideles Laici, 37). Precisely because this involves the internal consistency of our message about the value of the human person, the Church cannot be expected to change her position on this question. I want to be completely honest in this regard. This is not something subject to alleged reforms or 'modernizations'"-- Pope Francis, Apostolic Exhortation "The Joy of the Gospel," November 24, 2013.

Homily Suggestions:
 

Jer 20:7-9
Rom 12:1-2
Mt 16:21-27

Watch a video with homily hints

The Church’s efforts to proclaim, celebrate and serve the Gospel of Life are marked by the themes in today’s readings.

First, the effort to defend life is based on the thirst for God that today’s first reading from Jeremiah and today’s Psalm express. We long for him, who is life itself, and we long for others to possess him as well. We serve the Kingdom of Life because it has first captured us, enthralled us, and convinced us that all our happiness and fulfillment are found in it – the Kingdom of truth and life, of holiness and grace, of justice, love, and peace.

Second, it is that conviction which departs from a worldly way of thinking, which would see no connection between freedom and truth, but which instead asserts that individual belief and choice are primary, even over life itself. This attitude builds a culture of death. As St. Paul says in the second reading today, we must not conform ourselves to this age, nor to its “pro-choice” ways of thinking, especially about the unborn and the disabled. The pro-life movement is based on the renewal of our mind of which Paul speaks, a renewal that results in the ability to discern “what is good, pleasing, and perfect.” It is the basis of seeing, as John Paul II wrote in Evangelium Vitae, that “life is always a good.”

Third, the Gospel passage reinforces the need for this discernment. Peter was thinking in a worldly way when he saw suffering and crucifixion as something to be avoided at all costs. Such thinking today leads some to see abortion as a solution to the suffering of a “crisis pregnancy,” or euthanasia as the escape from illness and disability. But that is not Godly thinking. As someone has said, “The false god transforms suffering into violence; the true God transforms violence into suffering.” Thus Jesus did by his cross; thus he calls us to do by embracing ours.

 


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