Help your child grow in holiness

Olive Street • Aug 23, 2023

How good is our God! How blessed are we his people! How sacred is the family, the place where God first gathers us, forms us, and then sends us out into the world so that his kingdom comes as his will is done. How grateful we are that we can experience his very presence in the sacraments, brought to you, of course, by the power of the Holy Spirit.


These are examples of how you can help your child grow in holiness each day:


  • Pray with your child in the car, at the table or at bedtime.
  • Pray for your child when you are apart.
  • Read a short passage of the Bible at mealtime.
  • Look for opportunities to be of service in your family, parish, and community.
  • Examine your day with eyes of faith. Where is God in this day?
  • Develop a disposition of gratitude by giving thanks for God’s blessings, no matter how small.


This article comes to you from Our Sunday Visitor courtesy of your parish or diocese.


By Olive Street 23 Aug, 2023
“But we know one thing: nothing is impossible for God’s mercy! Even the most tangled knots are loosened by his grace. And Mary, whose ‘yes’ opened the door for God to undo the knot of the ancient disobedience, is the Mother who patiently and lovingly brings us to God, so that he can untangle the knots of our soul by his fatherly mercy.” Reflection: What knots in your soul need untangling? How might Mary’s example of saying yes to God help you to allow grace to loosen the hold those knots have on you? This article comes to you from Our Sunday Visitor courtesy of your parish or diocese.
By Gretchen R. Crowe 23 Aug, 2023
“And have you seen what is happening in beautiful Maui now? It makes me sick to think of it.” These laments from an elderly religious sister — 91 years old, to be exact — were shared with me just a few days after wildfires devastated the historic town of Lahaina, on the island of Maui, Hawaii. The subject is close to the heart of the elderly but otherwise sharp Sister Jean, who was giving a tour of the Shrine and Museum of St. Marianne Cope in Syracuse, New York, where Marianne lived and worked after joining the Third Order Sisters of St. Francis. For though Mother Marianne was highly successful in her vocation — she had become mother provincial of her congregation in New York — it was to Hawaii that she and a handful of other sisters traveled by choice to minister to the leper colonies there. Illustrating this change in venue from upstate New York to the Pacific Ocean, the walls of the small museum and shrine were covered with maps of the Hawaiian Islands and supersized photographs of blue water and lush greenery. It was a place that would become a pivotal part of Mother Marianne’s story . For it was there that she and her fellow sisters spent their days doing the unthinkable — caring for children who, stricken with the contagious disease, had been separated from their parents and the rest of their families. More than just caring for them, the sisters became family to those who were ill and forgotten.
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