October 12, 2015
Marian Shrine E-Newsletter
Volume 4, Issue 11
Fr. Jim McKenna Greetings!

Could Mary be a model to us?
If you look at a dictionary for a definition of the word "model," you will get suggestions such as: a person or thing proposed for imitation or comparison; an exemplary, ideally perfect person.
However, the lofty presentation of Mary in the Book of Revelation -"Behold a great potent appeared in heaven, a woman clothed with the sun, with the moon under her feet, and on her head a crown of twelve stars" (Rev 12:1) - is something that makes her almost inimitable. Definitely not a model to simple ordinary folk!
Ask any youngster who they like and admire. He/she will give you a list of actors and actresses. In fact, many of our youngsters and teenagers look up to these actors and actresses, and strive to imitate them in their style of talking - acting - behaving and even dressing. They will spend hours and hours in front of the television watching them dance, or beside the radio listening to their songs. These actors and actresses have become their heroes/heroines and models. These models give them the glamour and the glitz for which all seem to be looking in today's twenty- first century.
Mary does not seem to be as glamorous a model, and hence, perhaps, we dare not present her to today's youngsters as a model who inspires.
 
What has Mary to offer us as a model?
She has something to offer that these other models do not offer.
Let us take a few minutes to look at this model:
 
Mary is a model of OBEDIENCE
Mary listened to the voice of the Lord, and said: "Behold the handmaid of the Lord. Let it be done to me according to your word."
Obedience is hard to come by for those who are young or for religious who are accustomed to being life-long superiors! We question curfew time, seeking permissions, and many other things under the pretext that these are passé today. We question decisions and argue forcefully, and claim that it is part of "dialogue". It is so ironic that when a suggestion or decision comes from another, it always seems wrong and not correct.
Scripture tells us that "obedience is better than sacrifice." It is here that Mary is a model for us lay and religious.
 
Mary is a model of HUMILITY
In a world where all of us want to prove our worth - want to be recognized, strive to be in the limelight - Mary remains humble.
She reaches out to her cousin Elizabeth when she hears that she has conceived John the Baptist. The Mother of God reaches out to an ordinary simple peasant!
 
Mary is a model of SERVICE
Who does not like to be served? It raises our esteem and standing in society, or at least we think so. We may even feel that service is menial, and should be done but not by us. Service is noble.
Mary reaches out to the embarrassed couple at the wedding feast at Cana. Her service is one of care and concern.
Let Mary not be a model only for artists and sculptors; let her be a model for you and me. Let Mary be a model not only to be admired, but also and more especially to be imitated.
May we learn from Mary our Model!
 
God bless you.
 
In Mary Help of Christians,
I remain,
Fr. Jim McKenna SDB
Director
 
Lifestyle Choice

A couple of years ago I had an interesting experience going through security at the airport...

The TSA agent who was directing traffic asked me an ordinary everyday question:

"How are you?"

I responded that I was well, and I also asked her how she was doing. "I'm also well," she replied.

Then I said to her, "Yeah, that definitely shows. You're smiling."

Continuing with her smile, she said to me something so simple yet so profound:

"It's a lifestyle choice."
 
St. Alexandrina da Costa
Feast - October 13 

Alexandrina Maria da Costa was born on 30 March 1904 in Balasar, Portugal. She received a solid Christian education from her mother and her sister, Deolinda, and her lively, well-mannered nature made her likeable to everyone.
Her unusual physical strength and stamina also enabled her to do long hours of heavy farm work in the fields, thus helping the family income.
When she was 12, Alexandrina became sick with an infection and nearly died; the consequences of this infection would remain with her as she grew up and would become the "first sign" of what God was asking of her:  to suffer as a "victim soul".

The consequences of sin
When Alexandrina was 14, something happened that left a permanent imprint on her, both physically and spiritually: it gave her a face-to-face look at the horror and consequences of sin.
On Holy Saturday of 1918, while Alexandrina, Deolinda and a young apprentice were busily sewing, three men violently entered their home and attempted to sexually violate them. To preserve her purity, Alexandrina jumped from a window, falling 13 feet to the ground.
Her injuries were many, and the doctors diagnosed her condition as "irreversible":  it was predicted the paralysis she suffered would only get worse.
Until age 19, Alexandrina was still able to "drag herself" to church where, hunched over, she would remain in prayer, to the great amazement of the parishioners. With her paralysis and pain worsening, however, she was forced to remain immobile, and from 14 April 1925 until her death - approximately 30 years - she would remain bedridden, completely paralyzed.
Alexandrina continued to ask the Blessed Mother for the grace of a miraculous healing, promising to become a missionary if she were healed.
Little by little, however, God helped her to see that suffering was her vocation and that she had a special call to be the Lord's "victim". The more Alexandrina "understood" that this was her mission, the more willingly she embraced it.
She said:  "Our Lady has given me an even greater grace:  first, abandonment; then, complete conformity to God's will; finally, the thirst for suffering".

Mission to suffer with Christ
The desire to suffer continued to grow in her the more her vocation became clear:  she understood that she was called to open the eyes of others to the effects of sin, inviting them to conversion, and to offer a living witness of Christ's passion, contributing to the redemption of humanity.
And so it was that from 3 October 1938 until 24 March 1942, Alexandrina lived the three-hour "passion" of Jesus every Friday, having received the mystical grace to live in body and soul Christ's suffering in his final hours. During these three hours, her paralysis was "overcome", and she would relive the Stations of the Cross, her movements and gestures accompanied by excruciating physical and spiritual pain. She was also diabolically assaulted and tormented with temptations against the faith and with injuries inflicted on her body.
Human misunderstanding and incredulity were also a great cross for her, especially when those she most expected would "assist" her - members and leaders of the Church - were adding to her crucifixion.
An investigation conducted by the Curia of Braga resulted in a circular letter written by the Archbishop which contained a series of "prohibitions" regarding Alexandrina's case. It was the result of a negative verdict made by a commission of priests.
In addition and by way of spiritual comfort, after her spiritual director, a Jesuit priest who had helped her from 1934 to 1941, stopped assisting her, a Salesian priest, Fr Umberto Pasquale, came to her aid in 1944.

Nourished only by the Eucharist
On 27 March 1942, a new phase began for Alexandrina which would continue for 13 years and seven months until her death. She received no nourishment of any kind except the Holy Eucharist, at one point weighing as few as 33 kilos (approximately 73 pounds).
Medical doctors remained baffled by this phenomenon and began to conduct various tests on Alexandrina, acting in a very cold and hostile way towards her. This increased her suffering and humiliation, but she remembered the words that Jesus himself spoke to her one day:  "You will very rarely receive consolation... I want that while your heart is filled with suffering, on your lips there is a smile".
As a result, those who visited or came into contact with Alexandrina always found a woman who, although in apparent physical discomfort, was always outwardly joyful and smiling, transmitting to all a profound peace. Few understood what she was deeply suffering and how real was her interior desolation.
Fr Pasquale, who stayed close to Alexandrina throughout these years, ordered Alexandrina's sister to keep a diary of her words and her mystical experiences.
In 1944, Alexandrina became a member of the "Union of Salesian Cooperators" and offered her suffering for the salvation of souls and for the sanctification of youth. She kept a lively interest in the poor as well as in the spiritual health of those who sought out her counsel.

"Do not offend Jesus anymore!'
As a "testimony" to the mission to which God had called her, Alexandrina desired the following words written on her tombstone:  "Sinners, if the dust of my body can be of help to save you, come close, walk over it, kick it around until it disappears. But never sin again:  do not offend Jesus anymore! Sinners, how much I want to tell you.... Do not risk losing Jesus for all eternity, for he is so good. Enough with sin. Love Jesus, love him!".
Alexandrina died on 13 October 1955. Her last words: "I am happy, because I am going to Heaven".
 
Laughter the best medicine
 
THE GETAWAY!
A man walked into a Topeka, Kansas Kwik Stop and asked
for all the money in the cash drawer. Apparently, the take was too small, so he tied up the store clerk and worked the counter himself for three hours until police showed up and grabbed him.

*DID I SAY THAT?*

Police in Los Angeles had good luck with a robbery suspect who just couldn't control himself during a lineup. When detectives asked each man in the lineup to repeat the words:
'Give me all your money or I'll shoot', the man shouted, 'that's not what I said!'

*ARE WE COMMUNICATING?*

A man spoke frantically into the phone: 'My wife is pregnant and her contractions are only two minutes apart'. 'Is this her first child?' the doctor asked. 'No!' the man shouted, 'This is
her husband!'

The Devotion of the Three Hail Marys

The devotion of the THREE HAIL MARYS is a very simple yet most efficacious devotion.
Everyday, recite Three Hail Marys, adding the invocation: "O Mary, My Mother, keep me from mortal sin." Many people recite the Three Hail Marys as part of their morning and night prayers. To practice this devotion in time of danger, stress, special need or temptation, is a sure means to obtain Our Lady's help.


Thank you Mother Mary and Don Bosco for curing my grand daughter from a bout of food poisoning. She was admitted to hospital and I started praying the three Hail Marys and the Divine Mercy chaplet and she recovered very swiftly. Mrs. J. Silva, NY 

Through the daily recitation of the three Hail Marys for nine months, my sister had a normal delivery. Thank you dear Mother. A Devotee, NH

My sincere thanks to Our Lady for granting that all my medical tests were normal.
Marie, Alberta, Canada


In Closing

Dear devotees of Our Lady and Don Bosco,
If you have received a miracle through the intercession of Our Blessed Mother, we would like to hear from you. Email us at MaryShrine@aol.com.
 
Bookstore hours: Monday - Saturday - 10 am to 5 pm, Sundays: 12 - 4 pm

Weekday Masses: 12 noon. Confessions on weekdays begin at 11.30 am.
Sunday Masses: 11 am and 12.30 pm

Other activities: Day Retreats, Weekend retreats, Don Bosco Summer Camp, Eucharistic Adoration, Friday night Lenten Dinners, 50/50 raffle, 350 club, Rosary Madonna Statue. Rent Lomagno Hall, Rent our Banquet Hall.

MEMORIES
Remember a Loved One: Engrave plaques on Wall of Memories, adopt a Tree, Engrave blocks on Walk of Honor, All Souls, All year Candle lighting, Holiday (Christmas and Easter), Flowers, Schedule a Mass, Bell Chimes.

MASS INTENTIONS
To offer a mass intention, please write to
Fr. Jim McKenna SDB
174 Filors Lane,
Stony Point, NY 10980

 
Fine Print

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Marian Shrine
174 Filors Lane, Stony Point, NY 10980
(845) 947-2200