Recommended Book
Introduction to the Devout Life
- Francis de Sales's Introduction to the Devout Life has remained a uniquely
accessible and relevant treasure of devotion for nearly four hundred years. As
Bishop of Geneva in the first quarter of the seventeenth century, Francis de
Sales saw to the spiritual needs of everyone from the poorest peasants to court
ladies.
Book Review |
Preview All Authors
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5th Annual Women's Day of Reflection
May 11, 2013 |
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IAACEC (Interregional African American Catholic Evangelization Conference) “Living Our Faith”
June 14 - 16, 2013 |
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The 2013 Archbishop Lyke Conference
June 19-23, 2013 |
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Men’s Day of Prayer & Healing
March 9, 2012 |
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Women's Day of Reflection
June 29, 2013 |
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Men's Day of Reflection
July 13, 2013 |
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World Youth Day 2013
July 23-28, 2013 |
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NCYC 2013: SIGNED, SEALED, DELIVERED - The National Catholic Youth Conference
November 21-23, 2013 |
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Site Links |
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Immaculée Ilibagiza
Immaculée Ilibagiza is a living example
of faith put into action. Immaculée's life was transformed
dramatically during the 1994 Rwandan genocide where she and seven
other women spent 91 days huddled silently together in the cramped
bathroom of a local pastor's house. Immaculée entered the bathroom a
vibrant, 115-pound university student with a loving family - she
emerged weighing just 65 pounds to find her most of her family had
been brutally murdered.
Immaculée credits her salvage mostly to
prayer and to a set of rosary beads given to her by her devout
Catholic father prior to going into hiding. Anger and resentment
about her situation were literally eating her alive and destroying
her faith, but rather than succumbing to the rage that she felt,
Immaculée instead turned to prayer. She began to pray the rosary as
a way of drowning out the negativity that was building up inside
her. Immaculée found solace and peace in prayer and began to pray
from the time she opened her eyes in the morning to the time she
closed her eyes at night. Through prayer, she eventually found it
possible, and in fact imperative, to forgive her tormentors and her
family's murderers.
Immaculée's strength in her faith
empowered her to stare down a man armed with a machete threatening
to kill her during her escape. She also later came face to face with
the killer of her mother and her brother and said the unthinkable,
"I forgive you." Immaculée knew, while in hiding, that she would
have to overcome immeasurable odds without her family and with her
country destroyed. Fortunately, Immaculée utilized her time in that
tiny bathroom to teach herself English with only The Bible and a
dictionary; once freed she was able to secure a job with the United
Nations.
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