Episodes

Monday Apr 20, 2020
Wildflowers and Grace
Monday Apr 20, 2020
Monday Apr 20, 2020
How can praying the The Holy Rosary, wildflowers, and fresh cut grass remind us, amid this difficult time, that God is present? Find out when Sister Geralyn, SCC, discusses this and more in this episode of “Musings from a Catholic Evangelist.”

Monday Apr 20, 2020
Monday Apr 20, 2020

Category: A Biblical Walk Through the Sacraments, Sacraments Tag: Bible reading, Old Testament, prophecy, sacraments
Are “sacraments” biblical?
Sacrament comes from the Latin for “oath” or “swear,” and oath-taking is as old as Creation, as old as the Old Testament, as old as Christianity. God Himself swears an oath to you in every sacrament, and you swear one to Him every time you receive one.
Jesus instituted seven Christian sacraments, or covenants, for His one; holy; catholic (meaning universal); and apostolic church. The sacraments are “the masterworks of God” (CCC 1116), that administer and affect saving grace in the soul. Together, they equip us for a complete self-donation to God that draws us deeper and deeper into the mystery of God’s Trinitarian life for all eternity.

Monday Apr 20, 2020
The Frank Friar - Episode 253: Mercy and Being Loveable
Monday Apr 20, 2020
Monday Apr 20, 2020
Today, I am reflecting about Divine Mercy. What is one of the acts of God’s Mercy? It is revelatory. What is being revealed via God’s mercy? That is a question I wrestle with today in this episode.
If you like my podcast, please make sure to subscribe to the podcast it really does help me. You can find more of my content at my website www.thefrankfriar.com and my YouTube at www.youtube.com/c/thefrankfriar

Monday Apr 20, 2020
108 Divine Mercy in the Marketplace
Monday Apr 20, 2020
Monday Apr 20, 2020
Pope Francis said, “We are called to show mercy because mercy has first been shown to us.” But, how do we do this at work? In this episode of By Your Life, we talk about the obstacles and solutions to extending mercy in the marketplace.
Sunday of Divine Mercy – April 19, 2020
Happy Easter and welcome to the one hundred and eighth episode of By Your Life. I’m Lisa Huetteman and I know that you have many options for what you could be doing right now, so I thank you for choosing By Your Life.
My goal is to inspire, empower, support, challenge, and encourage you to connect Sunday, with Monday-Friday, in a secular business world. It’s my desire to help you live our Catholic faith in the marketplace. I hope to offer you practical ways to go forth and glorify the Lord by your life.
In this edition, we’ll reflect on the readings for the Second Sunday of Easter or Sunday of Divine Mercy. In the 1930s, Jesus chose St. Maria Faustina Kowalska to receive private revelations of his Divine Mercy that she recorded in her diary. Fourteen times she recorded that Jesus requested that the Feast of Mercy be observed on the Second Sunday of Easter. It wasn’t until 2000 that the Vatican decreed that this Sunday would be known as the Sunday of Divine Mercy.
In her diary, St. Faustina recorded that Jesus told her, “My daughter, tell the whole world about my inconceivable mercy. I desire that the Feast of Mercy be a refuge and a shelter for all souls, and especially for poor sinners. On that day, the very depths of my tender mercy are open. I pour out a whole ocean of graces upon the souls who approach the Fount of my Mercy.” (Diary 699)
In approaching the Fount of his Mercy, we are offered what St. Pope John Paul II referred to as “a personal encounter with the merciful Savior Himself.” So, it is no coincidence that this Sunday, as with every Second Sunday of Easter, we are presented the 20th chapter of John’s Gospel, verses 19-31, that is filled with the revelation of the merciful Savior. Although we could discuss the meaning of the revelation for hours, I’d like to offer three messages that you and I can contemplate and put into action this week.
Fear creates an absence of peace
The first is fear and the absence of peace. The disciples were in a locked room for fear of the Jews, and rightfully so. After all, Jesus had just been crucified and all their hopes were crushed. So, it is quite understandable that they were afraid. But maybe there was more to their fear. When Mary Magdalene encountered the risen Jesus, he asked her to “Go tell my brothers to go to Galilee, and there they will see me.” (Mt 29:10) Maybe they were afraid of facing this Risen Lord after denying him and fleeing in his hour of need. As much as they longed for the Lord, they may have equally feared seeing him.
So, there they were. Locked up in the room and afraid. Yet, “Jesus came and stood in their midst and said to them, ‘Peace be with you’.” (Jn 20:19) When they recognized him, they rejoiced and Jesus said to them again, “Peace be with you.” (Jn 20:21) Then, a week later when he joined them in the room, although the doors were locked again, he said, “Peace be with you.” (Jn 20:26) They were afraid. They were locked up in their fear and three times Jesus offered peace to his disciples. Fear steals our peace. Jesus replaces it.
So, what are you afraid of? What is your greatest fear in life? This is a serious question to ponder because our fears can lead us to destructive behavior. One friend once told me her greatest fear is disappointing someone, and another said he feared not living up to other people’s expectations. Both these people are obsessively busy, and being obsessively busy robs them of their peace, and they know it.
We all have fears that drive our behaviors. At work, the know-it-all is afraid of his/her weaknesses, the people-person is afraid of not being liked, the perfectionist is afraid of being wrong, and the accommodator is afraid of conflict. Their fears present themselves as aggressiveness, defensiveness, or passivity. They are argumentative, unrealistic, take criticism personally, or overcomplicate situations and hesitate to act. Understanding your fears and those of others will go a long way to improving not only your success, but theirs. So, what is your fear and how is it impacting your success and robbing you of your peace?
Mercy brings peace
The second of the three messages I’d like to discuss is the connection between mercy and peace. Thomas Merton wrote, “We are not at peace with others because we are not at peace with ourselves, and we are not at peace with ourselves because we are not at peace with God.”
If you’re not at peace with God, it is only because you’ve not accepted his Divine Mercy. Like “Doubting Thomas” in the Gospel, hearing about someone else’s experience wasn’t enough. And so, Jesus appeared again the next week and Thomas was there and had a personal experience with the Risen Lord. Immediately he believed, exclaiming, “My Lord and my God!” (Jn 20:28)
Just as Thomas needed to see, and touch the Lord, we too must experience him ourselves. Again, St. Pope John Paul II said Divine Mercy “is a personal encounter with the merciful Savior himself.” So, why not? Why not accept Jesus’ invitation to approach the Fount of Mercy?
Through St. Faustina, Jesus gave us the Divine Mercy Image, the Feast, the Chaplet, and even the doctrinal message, which are means to enable us to personally experience the love of Jesus Christ. I had a transformational experience after meditating on the Image of Divine Mercy at a retreat many years ago. I kept looking at it and repeating the words, “Jesus, I trust in You”, realizing that I really didn’t trust in him. That realization was the beginning of a personal encounter with God’s merciful love that has continued to grow to this day.
But I know that just like the other disciples’ experience wasn’t what Thomas needed, my personal experience means nothing to you. You need your own personal experience of the love of Jesus Christ. He’s offered us the gift of his mercy. By accepting his mercy, we will find peace with God.
Share what we have received
Which brings me to the third message from this week’s Gospel, and that is our responsibility to share what we have received.
Jesus said to the disciples, “Peace be with you. As the Father has sent me, so I send you.” (Jn 20:21) St. John Paul II points out that receiving is a prerequisite for giving. He said, “Only if we have experienced His love for ourselves, are we adequately prepared to share His love effectively with others.” But when we have, it is our responsibility. As Pope Francis said, “We are called to show mercy because mercy has first been shown to us.”
And how can we do this at work? How can we be bearers of Divine Mercy to others in our workplaces? In my book, The Value of Core Values, I wrote about The Fechtel Company, a designer and builder of high-end, high-quality custom homes. Jay Fechtel, the company’s CEO, shared a story about a team member named David. David was the type of guy who would take a sincere interest in the subcontractors on their job sites. He would regularly ask them how they were doing and how he could pray for them.
One day David went over to talk to the guy who was there to clean the port-o-potty. Normally, he wouldn’t have any interaction this guy with because he would come at random times, do his work, and leave. You know how seedy a port-o-potty can get. It’s a lot of work to keep them clean.
Well, this man was extremely moved by David’s offer to pray. It turned out that his son had Down syndrome and he and his wife had been struggling with this issue for years. When David share this with his team, several other employees started checking in with this man and praying with him too whenever he was on site.
Jay said that his team knew that this man truly appreciated the mercy they extended him because they had the cleanest port-o-potty in the state. I’m talking about clean! He would scrub those things down and put little tablets in them that made them smell so great, you could smell the fragrance twenty feet away!
Now that’s Divine Mercy at work!
Some of us are afraid to ask a stranger if they would like us to pray for them and a lot of workplaces would be hostile to this approach. But you don’t have to outwardly offer prayer to show mercy. You can listen to understand the other person’s fears and offer them mercy. You can love them despite their weaknesses by seeing their potential, or even better, you can help them, teach them, and encourage them. “Mercy towards a human life in a state of need is the true face of love” Pope Francis said, explaining that it is by loving the other that one becomes a true disciple of Jesus and the face of the Father is revealed.
God’s mercy is our liberation
Recognizing our own fears, accepting God’s mercy to overcome them, and then extending that mercy to others are three steps to practicing Divine Mercy in the marketplace. Pope Francis reminds us that “God’s mercy is our liberation and our happiness”, emphasizing, “it is the air that we must breathe”.
Let’s pray and ask for the help of our merciful Father.
Eternal God, in whom mercy is endless and the treasury of compassion inexhaustible, look kindly upon us and increase Your mercy in us, that in difficult moments we might not despair nor become despondent, but with great confidence submit ourselves to Your holy will, which is Love and Mercy itself. Amen.
May God bless you with his abundant mercy this week and may you glorify the Lord by your life.
If you liked this episode, spread the word. You know what to do, forward, share, or click to post. Also, check out the Resources page where you can find a link to the books and other resources mentioned in this and other episodes of By Your Life. I’m always interested in what you think, so give me some feedback by leaving a comment.

Monday Apr 20, 2020
CSR 64 Porter Moser
Monday Apr 20, 2020
Monday Apr 20, 2020
The head men's basketball coach at Loyola University Chicago since 2011, has been an NCAA Division I men's basketball coach for 30 years. His 2018 team went to the Final Four. As a player he competed on the Creighton University Bluejays and in 2017 was named to the Illinois Basketball Coaches Association Hall of Fame for his accomplishments as a player. He has also been inducted into the Chicagoland Sports Hall of Fame. Plus he is the author of a new book called, "All In: Driven by Passion, Energy, and Purpose."

Monday Apr 20, 2020
Do You Know Who You Are Talking To_ 😲
Monday Apr 20, 2020
Monday Apr 20, 2020
I wonder, how many times do you pray and yet do not approach God with reverence and love? I am guilty of this myself ... reciting prayers and not really thinking about who I am talking to ... I am just praying with my lips!
And the bible says that is not good! Listen in and try something different!

Monday Apr 20, 2020
The Will Within with guest Monika Wahi
Monday Apr 20, 2020
Monday Apr 20, 2020

Sunday Apr 19, 2020
What it Means to be a Man Serving Christ (Bill Moyer)
Sunday Apr 19, 2020
Sunday Apr 19, 2020
EPISODE 434
Bill Moyer serves as CEO of SOS Leadership. On this episode join Bill and Bear as look at what it takes to be a leader rooted in scripture in today’s world.
Learn more at sosleadership.com

Saturday Apr 18, 2020
Young Catholics Respond: Divine Mercy Sunday
Saturday Apr 18, 2020
Saturday Apr 18, 2020
On this episode of Young Catholics Respond, Bill Snyder talks about Divine Mercy.
Help support our mission at Patchwork Heart Radio to "sew hope into broken hearts" by becoming our patron on Patreon and sign up for the Discover Your Mission tier to get an inspiring personal mission, including a collection of three full-length videos on a new theme each month from a different Catholic speaker/author/evangelist.

Saturday Apr 18, 2020
Clumsy Theosis - Divine Mercy
Saturday Apr 18, 2020
Saturday Apr 18, 2020
With Divine Mercy Sunday being this weekend, Richaél Lucero explores the message of Divine Mercy that Jesus gave to St. Faustina in the 1930’s. This episode is jam packed! Learn the “ABC’s” of the Divine Mercy message, the necessity for trust, and the true understanding of mercy and how it embodies our relationship with God. Plus, how to receive the graces promised on the feast of Divine Mercy Sunday (even under social distancing restrictions.)
SHOW NOTES:
—Email list sign up: eepurl.com/gItxjH
— Donate via Patreon- www.patreon.com/clumsytheosis
—Divine Mercy website: www.thedivinemercy.org
—Scriptures referenced:
- Hosea 6:6 “For I desire steadfast love and not sacrifice, the knowledge of God, rather than burnt offerings.”
—Prayers mentioned:
- Spiritual communion prayer - wp.me/p7RT88-u6
Additional prayer to pray on Divine Mercy Sunday- wp.me/p7RT88-u6
—Episodes referenced:
-Abiding Together podcast episode on Trust and Divine Mercy- www.abidingtogetherpodcast.com/podcastar…ine-mercy
-Clumsy Theosis episode on the Jesus prayer, “Imaginative Prayer v. Quiet Prayer” - clumsytheosis.net/2019/11/11/imagi…vs-quiet-prayer/
-Clumsy Theosis series on the Beatitudes - clumsytheosis.net/2020/03/14/beati…mitating-christ/
SOCIAL MEDIA: Follow me!
Instagram— www.instagram.com/clumsytheosis/
Twitter— twitter.com/ClumsyTheosis
Facebook— www.facebook.com/clumsytheosis
VISIT MY WEBSITE: www.clumsytheosis.net
Mercy Love Devotion Divine Forgiveness Blessing Trust Patreon Catholic podcast Easter Eastertide divine mercy

Saturday Apr 18, 2020
The Importance of Family
Saturday Apr 18, 2020
Saturday Apr 18, 2020
This episode has Emma’s story of growing up with two abusive fathers that didn’t love her and how she was able to find God through her family in a hopeless situation. Also, how Christian turned away from his family, and became the problem that was hurting his family.

Friday Apr 17, 2020
Off the Shelf - Episode 173 with Ann Garrido
Friday Apr 17, 2020
Friday Apr 17, 2020
Let's talk about truth....not opinions...rather truth. Ann Gariddo joins me this week to break down what truth is and we can use truth to build our society. Get Ann's latest book Let's Talk About Truth: A Guide for Preachers, Teachers and Other Catholic Leaders in a World of Doubt and Discord here.

Friday Apr 17, 2020
Catholic Answers Live - Ask a Bishop and a Scientist Part 2
Friday Apr 17, 2020
Friday Apr 17, 2020
Dr. Stacy Trasancos and Bishop Strickland take questions from listeners concerning evolution, bioethics, and more.
Questions Covered:
- 01:07 - What is the significance of the earth’s story, from dinosaurs on? Is there evidence that people existed at the time of dinosaurs?
- 12:56 - Shouldn’t the body of Christ be trying to heal people from coronavirus?
- 22:49 - What was the relative risk of the early martyrs compared with the risk we are facing from this pandemic?
- 29:17 - A friend told me that we are all gods and he told me he was a shaman. He used to be Catholic. How can I respond and explain that there is only one God?
- 43:14 - Bishop Strickland recently said that a vaccine should be bypassed if it uses fetal tissues. Can he expand on this?

Friday Apr 17, 2020
Catholic Answers Live - Ask a Bishop and a Scientist Part 1
Friday Apr 17, 2020
Friday Apr 17, 2020
Dr. Stacy Trasancos and Bishop Strickland take questions from listeners concerning evolution, bioethics, and more.
Questions Covered:
Friday Apr 17, 2020
The Catholic Man Show - 12 year St. Bridget Devotion
Friday Apr 17, 2020
Friday Apr 17, 2020

12 year St. Bridget Devotion
About our drink:
We are pleased to announce the 2019 annual release of our Càirdeas series, Càirdeas Triple Wood Cask Strength. This exclusive bottling celebrates the Friends of Laphroaig and marks the annual Feis Ile festival on Islay.
The unique expression is a special triple maturation, first matured in ex-bourbon barrels, then in quarter casks and finally in European oak casks which previously held oloroso sherry. It is then barrier filtered and bottled at cask strength to create a punchy dram with Laphroaig’s signature richness of flavour and smoky taste.
Friends Only
On Islay there is a saying; We don’t make friends easily but the ones we do are for life. Launched in 1994, Friends of Laphroaig are fans, friends and followers of our distillery from all over the world. Never short of an opinion or two they help Laphroaig explore new expressions, attend tastings and sometimes even visit the distillery at Laphroaig’s home on Islay. To reward the loyalty of its following, each year we launch exclusive bottlings within the Càirdeas series.
Càirdeas means ‘friendship’ in Gaelic and, each year, a limited-edition bottling is crafted by distillery manager and fifth-generation Islay native, John Campbell, available exclusively to Friends of Laphroaig.

About our gear:
The French Press – A French press, also known as a cafetière, cafetière à piston, caffettiera a stantuffo, press pot, coffee press, or coffee plunger, is a coffee brewing device. Two French inventors (Mayer and Delforge) patented in 1852 a forerunner of the French press. A patent was filed by a Frenchman, Marcel-Pierre Paquet dit Jolbert, officially published on August 5, 1924. In 1923 Ugo Paolini, an Italian, lodged patent documents relating to a tomato juice separator and he developed the idea of making a coffee pot with a press action and a filter. He assigned his 1928 patent to Italian designer Attilio Calimani and Giulio Moneta[1] who filed it in 1929.
About our topic:
The 12 Year Prayers:
Prayers Honoring the 7 Times Jesus Spilled His Precious Blood for Us, as Revealed by Our Lady to St.
Bridget, and Approved by Pope Clement XII
O Jesus, now I wish to pray the Lord’s Prayer seven times in unity with the love with which You sanctified this prayer in Your Heart. Take it from my lips into Your Divine Heart. Improve and complete it so much that it brings as much honor and joy to the Trinity as You granted it on earth with this prayer. May these pour upon Your Holy Humanity in Glorification to Your Painful Wounds and the Precious Blood that You spilled from them.
About our drink: Laphroaig Cairdeas Triple Wood
About the gear: French Press
About our topic: St. Bridget Devotion

Friday Apr 17, 2020
Forte Catholic Ep 184-Happy (& Sad) Easter! w/Jeremy McLellan
Friday Apr 17, 2020
Friday Apr 17, 2020
Liv Harrison joins Taylor Schroll as cohost to chat about their respective Holy Week(Weak) celebrations. Pretty sad and difficult, but there's always a silver lining :)
Comedian Jeremy McLellan returns to the show to fix our sadness with his comedy brilliance, and how he is learning and growing as a person during the quarantine.
The final segment, Liv and Taylor continue the fun by forcing each other to pick between two things...a game that has been going around social media that Liv brought into Taylor's life...so he used it to torture her ;)
Follow Jeremy:
🎉Twitter/Insta: @jeremymclellan
Follow Liv:
🎉Insta: @thelivharrison
Follow Forte Catholic:
🎉Twitter: @taylorschroll & @fortecatholic
🎉Instagram: @taylorschroll
💖Twitch: Twitch.tv/fortecatholic
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Episode art by Rebekah Landry.
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Friday Apr 17, 2020
The Gary Zimak Show - Episode 058 - His Mercy Endures Forever!
Friday Apr 17, 2020
Friday Apr 17, 2020
The 2nd Sunday of Easter is also known as Divine Mercy Sunday. This week's edition of The Gary Zimak Show will focus on the Lord's mercy and how He is always willing to come to our assistance and forgive our sins. No matter how much you're suffering or how many times you have sinned, God's mercy is yours for the asking!

Friday Apr 17, 2020
What is Your Mission and Purpose?
Friday Apr 17, 2020
Friday Apr 17, 2020
Do you know what your mission and purpose are? The meaning of life?
Have you ever really thought about it?

Friday Apr 17, 2020

Friday Apr 17, 2020
Reflexión de las Buenas Nuevas del Viernes 24 de Abril, 2020
Friday Apr 17, 2020
Friday Apr 17, 2020
Podemos vivir en alegría si somos conscientes de ser amados apasionadamente por el Señor.
El texto de este audio puedes encontrarlo en nuestra web en http://gnm-es.org/reflexiones-de-las-buenas-nuevas/?useDrDate=2020-04-24.
Suscríbete para recibir las Reflexiones de las Buenas Nuevas por correo electrónico o por mensaje de texto a tu celular en https://gnm-es.org/reciba-las-reflexiones-diarias/

