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Showing posts with label Anabelle Hazard. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Anabelle Hazard. Show all posts

Wednesday, April 30, 2014

What would Jesus blog or tweet?

By Anabelle Hazard




If you’ve been on social media long enough, you’re familiar with expert tips on what makes for popular blog posts and most clicked or re-tweeted topics.  Such as: create lists; offer relationship advice; post popular #hashtags; draft helpful “how-tos” on hobbies or health tips; use humor, ask questions and make interesting headlines; link to articles, photos and videos; comment on current events, interact with celebrities; reward your followers… etc, etc

If you’ve done your scriptural homework long enough, you probably have an idea of what Jesus were to tweet/blog if he joined the online community and took the advice of the so-called experts. In fact, you’d probably also realize He was way ahead of his time and those so-called experts pocketed their tips off the New Testament.

1.  Create lists:  “Blessed are the poor in spirit, the meek, those who mourn, those who hunger and thirst for justice, merciful, pure of heart, peacemakers, those who are persecuted in my name…” (Matt 5:3-11)

2.  #Relationshipadvice.  “Do unto others what you would have them do unto you.” (Matthew 7:12) No one has greater love than this, to lay down one’s life for one’s friends.”  (John 15:13)


Continue reading at Anabelle's blog  Written by the Finger of God.

Saturday, April 12, 2014

Why Mary's portrait hangs in a Catholic home

By Anabelle Hazard





You’ve seen pictures of the Immaculate Heart of Mary beside the Sacred Heart of Jesus in many Catholic homes, I'm sure. In our home, the "alliance of the two hearts” devotion, (as it is also called) is not just a design fix to balance out our fireplace mantle decor.  Mary is enthroned with Jesus after a solemn ceremony based on theologically sound reasons for Mary’s role in our family:  she is our mother, queen and intercessor.


1. Mary is Our Mother

            Mary was shared with us when Jesus presented her to St. John at the foot of the cross, “Son, behold thy mother.”  Just as St. John obeyed Jesus and took Mary into his home, we do, too. Thus, Mary’s portraits beautify our walls the way a picture of my mother and mother-in-law remind our family of the mothers who have passed on to us remarkable faith and assure us of their constant support, guidance and intercession.  Mary’s picture is bigger, more ornate and recurs in more rooms because we love and venerate her and want to be constantly reminded of her motherly love for us.  

2. Mary is Our Queen

            In Fatima, Portugal, June 13, 1917, Mary confided to Servant of God Lucia Dos Santos, why she came to earth:  “Jesus wishes to establish throughout the world a devotion to my Immaculate Heart.” Devotion to Mary was the brainchild of her son, Jesus and the plan was within the will of God. Further, St. Jacinta Marto told Lucia before her death, “Tell them that the heart of Jesus wishes that by his side should be venerated the heart of Mary.”  This reference to the Sacred Heart recalls Jesus’ apparition and promise to St. Mary Margaret Alacoque: “I will bless every place where the image of my Sacred Heart is exposed and venerated.”


Read the rest at Anabelle's blog Written By the Finger of God.

Monday, February 10, 2014

Got Jesus on weekdays?

By Anabelle Hazard




A friend just asked me why I regularly receive Eucharist beyond Sunday Mass. Do I go for the kids to get used to Church?

“I go for me,” I replied.“I need Jesus.  If I let two consecutive days pass without the Eucharist, my soul is not at peace.”

To clarify: It’s not like I get heavenly consolations or mystically levitate during the Mass.  If I’m not late and trying to creep in so as not to distract the pewsitters, I can’t even concentrate from beginning to end.  Lots of days, I’m taking a child out to the bathroom, fiddling with their askew veils or correcting them. (“It’s time to stand;”  “Don’t turn your back on Tabernacle”; “Put that plastic tomato back in your purse! Why did you bring a purse when I told you not to? What do you mean you need a snack? Its toy food! Stop licking it NOW!”) I certainly don’t feel holy by just being in Jesus’ presence at Church.


Continue reading at Anabelle's blog Written By the Finger of God.

Monday, December 16, 2013

Our Lady, Undoer of Knots, and medical miracles

By Anabelle Hazard



Anabelle and her dad, swinging at Anabelle's
wedding.



Of course, bad things happen to good people. My innocent 14 month old nephew was run over by an SUV in a library parking lot in Orange County. Though there was a medic or a nurse (can’t remember now) on the site who helped administer first aid, he was rushed to the ER trauma unit and the doctors’ prognosis was that due to severe head injury, he had “less than 1% chance of survival.” 

Everyone in the circle of family and friends poured in for help and support. Those who visited the hospital prayed the rosary constantly with my cousin, the toddler’s mother. It so happened that they wound up in a hospital that had just gotten word about a nurse who’d just invented a brain catheter for children. Since it had just gotten approved, my nephew was the first patient to use it. The catheter would eventually save his life. My nephew is a healthy, soccer playing, trophy-winning, 14 year-old today.

Of her experience, my cousin has said, “God used that less than 1% chance of survival and turned it into a miracle.”

In mid October, my dad suffered a mild stroke. He was diagnosed with aneurysm. In layman’s terms, a couple of huge balloons lodged in inconvenient positions by his heart. Several local doctors refused to perform surgery and others floated a risky open-heart surgery as the solution.

At about this time, the earth trembled with a 7.4 magnitude earthquake, which damaged the hospital wing, prompting doctor-friends to advise my dad to fly to Manila for other options. My sister (a physician) scouted around for the nth medical opinion by seeking a cardiologist outside the hospital OR.  God-incidentaly, another physician (lounging at the sides) overheard the consultation and recommended a surgeon in Manila who specialized in a more modern, less invasive procedure of grafting instead of the open-heart surgery.


Continue reading at Anabelle's blog  Written By the Finger of God.

Monday, November 18, 2013

Thankful for earthquakes and supercyclones

By Anabelle Hazard








When supercyclone “Haiyan” was poised to whip at the Philippines, I joined my countrymen in prayer, every hour on the hour.I sighed with blessed relief when my sister reported that although power had gone out, my hometown of Cebu City (which had just been rocked by a 7.4 magnitude quake) escaped the eye of the storm and didn’t sustain much damage.  But over the next few days, as more photos and news reports emerged of severe destruction, missing persons, unknown casualties and downed communications and transportations north of my province and its neighboring islands, my sighs were snuffled into tissues.

A ship washed into a leveled shore of a once bustling port; coconut trees shaven or snapped in two; a looted half of a mall building teetering; a roofless hospital; entire towns and villages  pulverized into debris; paper plates and pieces torn from the boxes containing messages of survivors to their anxious family members that “we are all alive” or “so and so is dead”; survivors sagging on  evacuation centers, one of which was a grown man, with a distinct brown scapular around his neck, crying…  and the most heartbreaking of all: a muddied corpse of a mother clutching her dead boy and her baby.

Along with the distressing images, my Facebook page  has been flooded with information on how to help and help speedily on its way. Packed bags of relief goods, donation centers set up, money coming in, my teenage nephews helping build homes, medicines arriving with volunteer doctors from California, Canada and Israel, US. Marines deployed, Japanese rescue teams, and local corporate businesses and news reporters doing their primary job of being compassionate human beings. 


Continue reading at Anabelle's Blog  Written by the Finger of God.

Saturday, October 26, 2013

What's Pope Francis' consecration of the world got to do with me?

by Anabelle Hazard



File:Blessed Virgin Mary.jpg
The immaculate Heart of Mary, artist unknown.


With all the post-interview spotlight beaming/glaring on Pope Francis, I hope all Catholics and secular media alike pay careful attention to what he did last October 13th, 2013: consecrated the world to the Immaculate Heart of Mary.

Specifically, I wish he makes everyone wonder: what this consecration means to me on a personal level, why is it so significant, and hopefully, make us all want to jump in.

Consecration means to dedicate an object or person thing toward a specific purpose. When one consecrates himself to Mary, he gives himself over to her hands so that she can teach and mold him for the purpose to which God created him.  St. Louis de Montfort writes that Mary is the “surest, easiest, shortest and most perfect means” to becoming like her Son Jesus.  Technically speaking, it is consecrating oneself to union with Jesus through Mary. Since Mary is in full union with the Divine Will, her mission is always to serve the Divine Will, particularly to help the formation and sanctification of souls. Mary, in short, helps us become the purpose for which we are created: saints. 

Blessed Pope John Paul II and St. Maximilian Kolbe are the two most famous saints in our history who consecrated themselves to Mary.  Blessed John Paul II, who dedicated his papacy to Mary with the motif Totus Tuus, is on the record-breaking fast track to canonization.  Granted, St. Maximilian Kolbe’s martyrdom is not the easiest path, but it was the surest one, and one he willingly accepted. 

The significance of consecration is that it is a covenant with a dual dimension

A person consecrated to Mary entrusts everything he has to her: body, soul, material possessions, spiritual goods (like merits and virtues), everything in his past, present and future.  Mary takes the gift (often imperfect because of human flaws and selfish motives), and presents the gift to Jesus perfectly wrapped. St. Louis de Montfort illustrated this analogy: a humble farmer offers his only fruit --a scruffy, bruised, worm-bitten apple-- to the King through the hands of the Queen.  The Immaculate Queen, conceived without sin, polishes that gift with her merits, and embellishes it with her virtues.  The gift becomes a purer, more pleasing version than what came out of the farmer’s own efforts.

Continue reading at Anabelle's blog Written by the Finger of God.

Thursday, September 26, 2013

The emergency novena

By Anabelle Hazard



File:Refugium peccatorum.jpg
Refuge of Sinners by Luigi Crosio (photo credit: Wikipedia)



Next to Mass, the most powerful prayer is the Rosary. For that reason and for the promises Our Lady made to St. Dominic, its been my all time favorite prayer. However, even I must admit that there are times when meditating on the Rosary isn’t the perfect fit.  For instance, when my 3 year old suffered a night of a relentless coughing fit. Nothing seemed to help: not the elevated pillow, humidifier with blessed salt, or cough syrup. We’d all had the virus the past week, so another sleepless night seemed inevitable and I just shuddered at the possibility of spending that night at the ER, waiting for a nurse to give her a steroid shot. 

As I next to her, brushing her hair off from her forehead, I replayed the conversation with my cousin earlier that day about the emergency/911/stat novena, so named because it’s a quick call to Heaven for help.  The express novena is composed of nine Memorares, which sounded perfect since at that point of desperation and exhaustion, even the Divine Mercy Chaplet seemed too long.


Continue reading at Anabelle's blog Written by the Finger of God.

Wednesday, August 28, 2013

How to get rich and save your soul

By Anabelle Hazard




File:Yellow Sweater.jpg
Yellow Sweater by Howard Russell Butler (photo credit: Wikimedia Commons).



Before you read my crash-course on becoming rich, you should know that I dangled perilously on the curved tip of a C in college accounting and that my husband managed our finances after he noticed that I couldn’t balance our checkbook.   So my post is actually about saving up for your $oul's eternity and getting rich in the process.

Still with me?  Good. I should also now admit to you that the decision to write for free was borne during of a time of financial constraints for my family.  Now, my husband used to be self-employed in Las Vegas, back when the housing market was thriving and his skill was in demand for model homes and by interior designers.  When we moved to the country, he worked full time for the Benedictine Abby and his business was relegated to the occasional side.  >Since we’d both discerned God called us to invest my time in homeschooling, I didn’t think we’d ever go on our precious vacations again, a perk we enjoyed while working in the big city.

Briefly, I toyed with the idea of writing secular or Christianized novels for a broader market and publisher appeal, (because two very Orthodox Catholic novels by some unknown author making it to the New York Times bestseller list is not going to happen in my lifetime).  But the obstinacy to reject watering down what I know to be truth about the Eucharist and Our Lady was fierce.  So with foolhardy faith and trust in God’s provision, I took a deep breath and.... gave my novels away.

Continue reading at Anabelle's blog Written By the Finger of God.

Monday, July 29, 2013

Teaching little children to love Eucharistic adoration

by Anabelle Hazard

 
File:Jan Davidsz. de Heem 1.jpg
Euchairst Encircled with a Garland of Fruit by Jan Davidsz (photo credit: Wikimedia Commons).



Many a Saturday morning, my mother mysteriously snuck off somewhere. It wasn’t until I was about nine or ten years old, when she finally took me to see who her important date was. I stepped into a quiet chapel of two columns of pews, with white habited nuns filling up the immaculate spaces. I bowed as they did and began to read a pamphlet my mother gave me.

The words to Quarter of an Hour before the Blessed Sacrament were written as if Jesus himself was conversing with me: “Have you no projects which occupy you? Tell me the details…what do you think of, what do you hope for?…Have you any troubles? My child tell Me all your troubles in detail…Have you no promises to make to me?…”

The conversation was so intimate that I naturally spoke to Our Lord as, well, as a child would. “Lord, please help me do better in math. Please help my hair be as pretty as Alyssa Milano’s. I will try not to tease my sister about her two front teeth…”

From there was born a devotion to Eucharistic Adoration.

I didn’t go regularly but I knew Our Lord was there if I should ever need to speak to Him. Decades later, it was in Adoration that I was healed of postpartum depression and received graces to cope with miscarriages.

As a mother with young children, I was blessed to find a parish that scheduled a weekly children’s adoration hour patterned after Fr. Leo’s EWTN show. There was a Catechist who would lead reflections and teach children how to bow, a choir that sang hymns, participative children who would voice out their petitions, toddlers toddling in the back and babies who blabbered along.

But when we moved, my attempts to initiate children’s hour failed. For months, I missed the choice graces reserved for Adoration devotees. So I resolved to bring my three children (then 5, 3 and 1 year old) instead of waiting for them to be “older and quieter”. In between errands, I would take them to Adoration for at least 15 minutes, depending on how long they could last without distracting anyone. The first five minutes were rough: pages of Bible books flipped noisily, gurgle-babble-wah, and stage whispers of “What ELSE can I do in here?” Occasionally, I’d have to leave the older two without supervision and take out the toddler to the back of the Church. This left me no time to reflect and asking myself “What’s the use?”

But knowing how miserable I was without Adoration and recalling how my mother planted seeds to the devotion, I asked for graces not to give up. Adoration is a commitment I’ve made for myself and a devotion I hope to sow in my children.

I took the children every two weeks or so, nagging at them to be quiet. Their behavior improved with each visit, and some days the fifteen minutes stretched to thirty. (Although sometimes they’d regress and I’d have to remove them from the chapel.) Once, I caught my middle child flapping her papers in the air. I stopped her mid-air, afraid she’d wake the snoozing adorer and demanded, “WHAT ARE YOU DOING?”

“I’m fanning Jesus mom. Its hot in here.”

Recently, I finally found fruit in my efforts. My oldest (now 7) scoured the house for the special Quarter of an Hour prayers that I loved as a child, and begged to go to Adoration that day. When we left, the middle child bowed and with flair, blew Jesus a kiss. The oldest shuffled her sister out the door and said matter of factly, “We really should come once a week, mom.” Now its not every day that happens, but it’s a start. It’s where I started.

To summarize:
1. Start loving Eucharistic Adoration yourself even if you have to start off alone with babysitting help. You cannot teach what you do not have.
2. Commit to bringing your children for at least 15 minutes every so often.
3. Give children appropriate reading material or download this prayer guide.
4. Pray for graces.
5. Don’t give up.


Anabelle blogs at  Written by the Finger of God. This post originally ran at Suscipio4Women.

Friday, June 28, 2013

Saved by a Hail Mary (literally)

by Anabelle Hazard




Courtesy www.stainedglassinc.com




During my Lenten retreat, I made a commitment to pray the rosary 3 times a day. That’s nothing compared to Imaculee Ilibagiza’s 27 rosaries a day, but it isn’t easy nonetheless.

More often than not, I get interrupted with cleaning up unscheduled juice spills or breaking up screaming catfights that I forget where I left off, so I have to start the decade all over again. Other times, I realize I’ve just mouthed off one “Our Father” and proceeded to several “For the Sake of His sorrowful passion…” from the Chaplet of Divine Mercy Chaplet before I realize what’s going on  And still, there are those moments when I just prayed a “Hail Mary” to the clock while thinking I had better get to the meatball soup if I am to have it ready for dinner.

These things distress me and I honestly begin to second guess myself about the promise I made. Do I really want to keep reducing my rosaries to mere lip service? Maybe I should stop and just focus on a single “Hail Mary” that I can pray with my heart.

But then I remember a true story my cousin told me. Her husband’s Jewish mother was three years old during the Holocaust. Their family had been hiding from the searching Nazi’s but somehow the child had wandered off in full view of the soldiers. The Nazi’s approached the child and as was normal practice, ferreted out suspected Jews by a simple test. They demanded that the child say a “Hail Mary.”



Continue reading at Annabelle's blog  Written by the Finger of God.

Tuesday, June 4, 2013

Discernement and what ifs?

by Annabelle Hazard





What if… you’d married the beer-loving football hero you dated in college; never turned in that starter job application at The Coffee Bean; stayed home in Llama County instead of flying off to the Big Apple; didn’t sit beside the girl with the pink polka dot hair-bow that first day of school; took the smog-congested freeway to work that one morning; kept up with your music/tennis/ballet lessons?

Surely, anyone who’s ever had a wide-awake moment of silence in the middle of the night has their own version of sighs regrets and sighs of reliefs. Or has simply posed the BIG WHAT IF?             
Twelve years ago, the nagging, whopping question mark in my life was: WHERE DO I GO FROM HERE?

With the help of a spiritual director, I learned to discern which of the open paths that lay before me had God’s finger pointed to it and which one would lead me away from my destiny. “Destiny,” as Fr. David Lonsdale SJ paints it, is “God’s hopes and dreams for our lives” if we discern and follow where He leads.   Listening to the music of the Holy Spirit, Fr. Lonsdale’s valuable book, is on “the art of discernment.”
            
 Although I (usually) discern before making important decisions, there is no avoiding the occasional “what if.”  But the answer is always, “It wouldn’t have been part of God’s will for my life.”  And there is immeasurable peace knowing that. I can go back to sound sleep (except when co-sleeping with a nursing baby or with the exhausted hard-working occasional snoring roommate-- can't help you there). 

My husband and I are currently facing a crossroad in our lives so I’m drawing up the significant points of discernment from my old journal and summarizing it for clarity.   You are welcome to peek into my diary, but don’t take this post as a substitute for spiritual direction.


Read Anabelle's 7 tips for discerning God's will at her blog  Written by the Finger of God.

Tuesday, May 14, 2013

The mother of all parenting books

by Anabelle Hazard


Catholic Mothers of the world, drop whatever book you are reading and read this one, The Mother of the Little Flower by Celine Martin. 

Here are some of the 7 quick things I’ve learned from Blessed Zelie Martin:

1. She encouraged her children to perform acts of self-denial for heaven and had them slide rosary beads or fill a drawer with nuts for each good deed.  I was so inspired that I sprinted off to Hobby Lobby with a project.  My flower-picking girls placed baskets on our altar and decorated it with a flower for each good deed/self-denial.  The bouquets will be offered up when we renew our consecration to Our Lady.
 
2. Bl. Zelie “was constantly busy with lace-making, housekeeping, working for her children and correspondence.”  I note the ‘correspondence’ with glee because what remains of her letters have been used as evidence for her canonization and gives me justified permission for the time I spend online. It’s certainly possible that if Bl. Zelie were living today, she’d be e-mailing, blogging or face-booking to keep her friends and family inspired.

3. She was vigilant at correcting her children’s faults: from poutiness, to selfishness, to vanity. But did her children call her a nag?  No!  Pauline, her oldest praised her:  “My parents always seemed to me to be saints.  We were filled with respect and admiration for them. I sometimes asked myself if it were possible to find their equals on earth.”

Read the rest of this guest post by Anabelle at her blog  Written by the Finger of God.