Have I mentioned that St. Peter's Square is quite romantic in the evening...I walk past it at least three times a week, and it never fails to take my breath away.
Sunday, October 30, 2005
San Pietro della notte
Have I mentioned that St. Peter's Square is quite romantic in the evening...I walk past it at least three times a week, and it never fails to take my breath away.
Friday, October 28, 2005
A Day in the Life...
This is a typical weekday at the Emmanuel School of Mission -
Before 8am: Breakfast...bread with butter & jam, cornflakes, instant coffee (echh) or tea. I am usually never up in time to have breakfast. Sometimes I go have a cappucino from the bar downstairs later in the morning (so good - far better than Seattle coffee!).
8:00 am - Praise
8:30 - 9:30: Adoration
10 - 12: Class
1:00 pm: Lunch...we have a wonderful cook named Rosa, everyone's already lamenting about how much weight they've gained!
3:30 - 5:30: Class
6:00 - Mass...twice a week at the chapel in the Domus, three times a week at Centro San Lorenzo (the official Vatican youth center). On Sundays we are encouraged to go to a different church within Rome. There are many to choose from, and all are magnificent.
7:30 - Dinner...like I said, wonderful food. Eggplant parmesan, and risotto, and braised meats, and yummy pastas. I have developed quite a large appetite here. :)
8:45 - 10:15: Study Time or Free Time or Various Activities
Before 8am: Breakfast...bread with butter & jam, cornflakes, instant coffee (echh) or tea. I am usually never up in time to have breakfast. Sometimes I go have a cappucino from the bar downstairs later in the morning (so good - far better than Seattle coffee!).
8:00 am - Praise
8:30 - 9:30: Adoration
10 - 12: Class
1:00 pm: Lunch...we have a wonderful cook named Rosa, everyone's already lamenting about how much weight they've gained!
3:30 - 5:30: Class
6:00 - Mass...twice a week at the chapel in the Domus, three times a week at Centro San Lorenzo (the official Vatican youth center). On Sundays we are encouraged to go to a different church within Rome. There are many to choose from, and all are magnificent.
7:30 - Dinner...like I said, wonderful food. Eggplant parmesan, and risotto, and braised meats, and yummy pastas. I have developed quite a large appetite here. :)
8:45 - 10:15: Study Time or Free Time or Various Activities
Tuesday, October 25, 2005
A Cardinal's Advice on Hypocrisy and the Heart
At Mass in St. Lawrence Youth Center in Rome
(my school, ESM, was at this mass)
ROME, OCT. 17, 2005 (Zenit.org).- Cardinal Jorge Mario Bergoglio of Buenos Aires says that hypocrisy impedes understanding the sentiments of one's heart. The Argentine cardinal explained this to a group of young people during a Mass celebrated Friday in the St. Lawrence Youth Center, located near St. Peter's Square. The cardinal spoke of young people as being "open and saying what they think; however, with the passing of the years we undertake a path that leads nowhere, the path of hypocrisy, which is not the way of sincerity." "Hypocritical men and women don't know who they are, they don't know their own feelings," he said in the Holy See's center for young pilgrims in Rome. To emphasize his point, Cardinal Bergoglio quoted Luke's Gospel, which had just been read during the Mass: "beware of the leaven of hypocrites." The cardinal encouraged young people to be conscious of the love of God: "The Father knows all of you, your brothers welcome you in community, therefore, go forward and, if you make a mistake, if you fall, you must get up. This is the truth, not hypocrisy."
"If you hear someone say something you don't like, say so, but don't be scandalized by life; the weapon of the hypocrite is to scandalize," he warned. "Tell the truth, be transparent, walk on the wide road, not on the path of hypocrisy," he urged the young people who before the Mass had spent two hours in adoration of the Blessed Sacrament. "On this road you will meet the cross, pain and problems," he said. "But your heart will be joyful. On the path of hypocrisy, on the contrary, you don't know what your heart feels." Cardinal Bergoglio, who is attending the Synod of Bishops on the Eucharist, concluded by referring to Mary: "She is the first of us who went the good way; she said yes when it was yes, and no when it was no."
(my school, ESM, was at this mass)
ROME, OCT. 17, 2005 (Zenit.org).- Cardinal Jorge Mario Bergoglio of Buenos Aires says that hypocrisy impedes understanding the sentiments of one's heart. The Argentine cardinal explained this to a group of young people during a Mass celebrated Friday in the St. Lawrence Youth Center, located near St. Peter's Square. The cardinal spoke of young people as being "open and saying what they think; however, with the passing of the years we undertake a path that leads nowhere, the path of hypocrisy, which is not the way of sincerity." "Hypocritical men and women don't know who they are, they don't know their own feelings," he said in the Holy See's center for young pilgrims in Rome. To emphasize his point, Cardinal Bergoglio quoted Luke's Gospel, which had just been read during the Mass: "beware of the leaven of hypocrites." The cardinal encouraged young people to be conscious of the love of God: "The Father knows all of you, your brothers welcome you in community, therefore, go forward and, if you make a mistake, if you fall, you must get up. This is the truth, not hypocrisy."
"If you hear someone say something you don't like, say so, but don't be scandalized by life; the weapon of the hypocrite is to scandalize," he warned. "Tell the truth, be transparent, walk on the wide road, not on the path of hypocrisy," he urged the young people who before the Mass had spent two hours in adoration of the Blessed Sacrament. "On this road you will meet the cross, pain and problems," he said. "But your heart will be joyful. On the path of hypocrisy, on the contrary, you don't know what your heart feels." Cardinal Bergoglio, who is attending the Synod of Bishops on the Eucharist, concluded by referring to Mary: "She is the first of us who went the good way; she said yes when it was yes, and no when it was no."
Friday, October 21, 2005
Not finished yet!
Thursday, October 20, 2005
More of Assisi
These are my own photographs from our week in Assisi...
Here is the guesthouse where we stayed
Here is the guesthouse where we stayedThis is Phillip, the director of the school, giving us a history lesson on the church in the background
Basilica of St. Francis in the late afternoon
Tiny chapel somewhere underneath the basilica where we celebrated mass
The cloister of the original convent of the Poor Clares
Sunday, October 09, 2005
I want to live in Assisi
Assisi was amazing. Although I have been to it once before, I could come back many times. My time there was also a bit intense, as there was much to adjust to - getting to know the other students I will be spending every day of the next nine months with, getting used to the school's full schedule, and adjusting to being in Italy (though I am having a fairly easy time of that!).
On the 1st, we arrived to a sort of guesthouse for pilgrims which was located a short walk from the southeastern gate of the city. You could see the church of St. Clare from the front driveway. It was sunny but a little chillier than Rome. After getting situated in our very plain rooms (with fabulous views of the valley, I might add) we walked up to the basilica of St. Francis and wandered around both the upper and the lower basilica, prayed at his tomb (that was really special) and had mass together in a tiny chapel that must have been underground somewhere beneath the basilica.
Sunday the 2nd, we went to the church of San Damiano, which is a tiny ancient church where St. Francis heard God speak to him. What is fascinating is that the original convent of the Poor Clares was built onto and around this church.
Monday the 3rd it was raining so hard that we abandoned our plan to hike up to an ancient hermitage in the mountains and instead visited the gorgeous basilica of Saint Clare (a.k.a. Santa Chiara - see photo at left), where her tomb is located, as well as the original San Damiano cross. This cross is incredibly beautiful and so old - an unknown Umbrian artist painted it in the 12th century. In 1257 the Poor Clares left their convent at San Damiano for San Giorgio (where Poor Clares still reside) and took the Crucifix with them, which is why there's only a copy of it at San Damiano now. They carefully kept the Cross for 700 years. In Holy Week of 1957, it was placed on public view for the first time over the altar in San Giorgio's Chapel in the Basilica of St. Clare.
The 4th was the Feast Day of St. Francis, and we went to a special mass at the Basilica in the morning. The day was sunny and gorgeous. In the evening our group made a nice dinner at our guesthouse and decorated the dining room; we put on some hilarious skits at the end of dinner and had a really lovely evening together.
The 5th day we did make that hike; it was up to an ancient hermitage, called Eremo delle Carceri, where St. Francis and his fellow Minor Friar brothers used to escape to so they could pray. It is a steep two hour walk up, but totally worth it - I have never been to such a breathtakingly peaceful place.
Assisi is unique among cities in Italy (Italians say this too). There is an unusual peace and I'd even say a spirit of contemplation about the city that one can actually feel. It is almost as if the lives of St. Francis and St. Clare were so radically dedicated to God and full of love and holiness and peace that the very walls of the city are filled with these graces even to this day.
We're back in Rome now and getting settled into our normal daily schedule. I will upload a few of the 200 or so photos I've taken so far, as soon as I figure out how. Ciao a tutti!
On the 1st, we arrived to a sort of guesthouse for pilgrims which was located a short walk from the southeastern gate of the city. You could see the church of St. Clare from the front driveway. It was sunny but a little chillier than Rome. After getting situated in our very plain rooms (with fabulous views of the valley, I might add) we walked up to the basilica of St. Francis and wandered around both the upper and the lower basilica, prayed at his tomb (that was really special) and had mass together in a tiny chapel that must have been underground somewhere beneath the basilica.
Sunday the 2nd, we went to the church of San Damiano, which is a tiny ancient church where St. Francis heard God speak to him. What is fascinating is that the original convent of the Poor Clares was built onto and around this church.
Monday the 3rd it was raining so hard that we abandoned our plan to hike up to an ancient hermitage in the mountains and instead visited the gorgeous basilica of Saint Clare (a.k.a. Santa Chiara - see photo at left), where her tomb is located, as well as the original San Damiano cross. This cross is incredibly beautiful and so old - an unknown Umbrian artist painted it in the 12th century. In 1257 the Poor Clares left their convent at San Damiano for San Giorgio (where Poor Clares still reside) and took the Crucifix with them, which is why there's only a copy of it at San Damiano now. They carefully kept the Cross for 700 years. In Holy Week of 1957, it was placed on public view for the first time over the altar in San Giorgio's Chapel in the Basilica of St. Clare.The 4th was the Feast Day of St. Francis, and we went to a special mass at the Basilica in the morning. The day was sunny and gorgeous. In the evening our group made a nice dinner at our guesthouse and decorated the dining room; we put on some hilarious skits at the end of dinner and had a really lovely evening together.
The 5th day we did make that hike; it was up to an ancient hermitage, called Eremo delle Carceri, where St. Francis and his fellow Minor Friar brothers used to escape to so they could pray. It is a steep two hour walk up, but totally worth it - I have never been to such a breathtakingly peaceful place.
Assisi is unique among cities in Italy (Italians say this too). There is an unusual peace and I'd even say a spirit of contemplation about the city that one can actually feel. It is almost as if the lives of St. Francis and St. Clare were so radically dedicated to God and full of love and holiness and peace that the very walls of the city are filled with these graces even to this day.
We're back in Rome now and getting settled into our normal daily schedule. I will upload a few of the 200 or so photos I've taken so far, as soon as I figure out how. Ciao a tutti!
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