Jl 1:13-15; 2:1-2 (circa 400 BC)
Gird yourselves and weep, O priests!
wail, O ministers of the altar!
Come, spend the night in sackcloth,
O ministers of my God!
The house of your God is deprived
of offering and libation.
Proclaim a fast,
call an assembly;
Gather the elders,
all who dwell in the land,
Into the house of the LORD, your God,
and cry to the LORD!
Father, we thank you for sending your Son, Jesus, to be our Savior.
On the Cross, He offered Himself for us as the Priest, the Victim, and the Altar of Sacrifice. “Through His wounds we are healed.”
We pray that through Jesus' priestly ministry, you will heal all of the sins of your people, especially the sins of priests and parents. Rescue your children from the wrongdoing of their elders. Renew in our hearts the wonders of your love. Strengthen, chasten, confirm, and preserve our priests in their vocation and send more men and women to help bring in a bountiful harvest as members of religious life.
May you be pleased with the sacrifice that your priests offer you; may they serve you with humble and contrite hearts; may the Communion we receive with and through them wash away our sins, cleanse us of our iniquities, and make us white as snow.
We ask all these things with the help of the Holy Spirit in Jesus' Name. Amen.
St. John Vianney, pray for us!
The Judas Factor: Jesus has been betrayed in every generation by those who have been called and chosen to represent Him.
Judas was the first of many brothers.
In our day, the sins of priests and religious is a grave scandal that has injured multitudes.
Forgive:
How many times do we have to forgive the priests who serve us? “Not seven times. Seventy times seven times” (Mt 18:22; a favorite saying of David du Plessis).