Father Don Calloway, MIC is a priest in the Congregation of Marians of the Immaculate Conception, and serves as Director of Vocations.
People occasionally come up to me, more in this time of COVID, to pray for them or a loved one.
All prayer ultimately goes to Jesus. Catholics believe in the communion of saints, that we have a family in heaven and can ask them to pray for us. Our Lord wants us to be part of the family of God, and everything is ultimately about Him. He wants us to help each other.
Certain prayers, such as those during Eucharistic Adoration, are forms of worship, but prayers of intercession to Mary or the saints are not the same as acts worship offered to God Mary.
The New Testament was originally in Greek and the word for “full of grace” actually meant, “Hail, you who have been for a long time full of grace.” Mary is the immaculate one, and was not born with the stain of original sin. She is not God and still needs God just like the rest of us.
Adam and Eve were our first parents, and they sinned.
Jesus is the new head and Mary is the new Eve; she is the mother of all the living. She is a gift to us from God, and the mother of all Christians. Jesus gave her to us, and not just John when he said from the cross, “Behold your mother.”
Many of us have a picture or photo of our family in our wallets or home; it is a remembrance of those we love.
We are not worshipping as God our family and certainly not the paper the photo was printed on. Sacred images are a “window to heaven,” and are reminders of how much we Love Jesus, Mary, our departed loved ones, etc.
Mary’s role is to bring people closer to her Son, Jesus Christ. She is the greatest disciple. She reminds us to do just as in the wedding feast at Cana, “Do whatever He tells you.”
With Fr. Eric Weldon. Father Emil Kapaun was born of Czech parents and was a chaplain who served in the Korean War. He was awarded posthumously the Congressional Medal of Honor, and Pope St. John Paul II declared him a Servant of God.
Mr. Adam Blai holds a unique position as an expert in religious demonology and exorcism officially recognized by the Diocese of Pittsburgh.
We're diving into the story of Christine Watkins, a remarkable Catholic speaker and author who's been through quite a journey. Once a ballet dancer with the San Francisco Ballet Company and a staunch atheist, Christine's life took a dramatic turn after a miraculous healing from cancer.