DAVID BELLUSCI
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Spread the good news

John 20: 11-18
"But Mary was standing outside near the tomb, weeping. Then, as she wept, she stooped to look inside, and saw two angels in white sitting where the body of Jesus had been, one at the head, the other at the feet. They said, 'Woman, why are you weeping?' 'They have taken my Lord away,' she replied, 'and I don't know where they have put him.' As she said this she turned round and saw Jesus standing there, though she did not realise that it was Jesus. Jesus said to her, 'Woman, why are you weeping? Who are you looking for?' Supposing him to be the gardener, she said, 'Sir, if you have taken him away, tell me where you have put him, and I will go and remove him.' Jesus said, 'Mary!' She turned round then and said to him in Hebrew, 'Rabbuni!' -- which means Master. Jesus said to her, 'Do not cling to me, because I have not yet ascended to the Father. But go to the brothers, and tell them: I am ascending to my Father and your Father, to my God and your God.' So Mary of Magdala told the disciples, 'I have seen the Lord,' and that he had said these things to her." 

radicality of the gospel

12/2/2023

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​6th Sunday of Ordinary Time/Year A

​The Book of Sirach (15) states you have before you the choice of fire and water: which would you choose?

Well, probably water because fire burns. Water quenches thirst. Water cools. Fire we associate with burning and pain, with water purity, cleansing, and life. These are the choices of every day because God’s commandments are precisely the equivalent to choosing fire or water:
--Choosing death or choosing life.

​The metaphor used in the book of Ecclesiastes is quite fitting: With fire we might be tempted to poke it, or even put our finger on it, only to discover how hot it is, and even get burned. And suffer. The pain the fire causes, we are left with the marks even the scars of being burned.

Is this any different than when we sin? We are left with the marks of sin? And we can carry that scarred tissue for a long time, even years…
Put out your hand: some choices mean life, others mean death.

Notice the freedom of which Sirach speaks: which ever your prefer, which ever you like – you choose. You are free.
Wonderful expression of freedom: God is not a tyrant who imposes on us and tells us what we must do. No. He leaves us free to choose, but our choice has consequences.
That is where we need to reflect and discern and ask ourselves simply whether this choice brings me closer to God or distances me from God. That’s how we choose.
And if we choose to distance ourselves from God, and place ourselves in the fires of hell, that is what God will give us. Your choice, Sirach says.
If we choose the purifying and regenerating waters that to Everlasting Life, that is what God will give us, Eternal life.
We are left to choose.

The question is whether we fear God, fear God as children who love their heavenly Father, and do not wish to offend Him by choosing sin. That is the choice God leaves us with: to sin or not to sin. While he does not command us to be godless, he has not given us permission to sin, either. When we truly love someone, we have no desire to hurt or offend them – this is true with God.

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Do you need a Saviour?

5/6/2021

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If you recognise you are in need of a Saviour, continue reading.

Our need of a Saviour is reflected in the richness and depth of our readings for Corpus Christi Sunday: Exodus 24, Hebrews 9, and Mark 14. In this harmony of these readings leading up to our salvation we experience absolute joy and profound thanksgiving.
How can we recognise our need for a Saviour? We all know the answer: we are sinners. Only someone who knows that he/she sins can say, “Lord, I need you.” “Lord save me.” “Lord come to my rescue.” This is the plea of the sinner who knows what it means to combat sin and to have the Saviour in their lives.
​
The Saviour who saves us from sin. Many people do not like the word “sin” because it raises the possibility that they could be imperfect, that they have faults and weaknesses, and that they need Jesus in their lives. It’s more psychologically reassuring when there is no sin, and so easier to deny sin. In other words, the false belief that, “I do not need to change. I have no sins.” With Catholics schools in Ontario celebrating sin with pride, I am convinced that more and more Catholics are disconnected from the reality of sin. So, why do they need Jesus in their lives. Or for that matter Catholic schools.
​
Sin is the moral rot that exists in our society; and the moral decay that spreads and contaminates us. For the sinner who acknowledges their sinfulness in need of Jesus’ truth, love and mercy, there is healing and cleansing, that only Jesus can offer.
 
Jesus offers us the cleansing of our sins through His Body and Blood. This is why we have Mass. Holy Communion is not standing in line because, “Hey, it’s what everyone does and I’m Catholic,” or “I have a right to Communion.” The Body and Blood of Christ that we receive acknowledges that we are sinners, we need healing, and we need strength; the Body and Blood of Christ means that I have prepared myself to receive Our Saviour, knowing I am a sinner through Sacramental Confession. I cannot receive Jesus into the impurity of my mind, heart, and body unless I have already been purified through Confession.
 
In Exodus we are given details of the Old Covenant: Moses sacrifices oxen sprinkling the blood on the altar and on the people. The transformation in the New Covenant is where Jesus does not sprinkle any animal blood, but instead, He himself is the sacrifice, he offers His Blood in the New Covenant. Jesus has done this to reconcile us with God because we are sinners; because we need a Saviour.


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Is Jesus Lord of your life?

22/5/2021

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May 2021 – what an outstanding month! May 1st, the first Saturday in May, we celebrate the Crowning of Mary. Them, May 1st we also celebrate St. Joseph the Worker, and this year dedicated to St. Joseph, we consecrate ourselves to him. May 5th is the foundation day of the Padre Pio Prayer Groups which in a few decades have spread across the world manifesting the work of the Holy Spirit. May 2021, we celebrate the Ascension when Jesus ascended to the Father after appearing to those who believed in Him for forty days. And finally, fifty days after Easter, we celebrate the Holy Spirit descending upon the Church (Acts 2). This certainly is a “fully loaded” month spiritually.

God continues to shower His Church with endless blessings; He even purifies us so we are properly disposed to receive the Sacraments.
​
Pentecost is associated with the Sacrament of Confirmation. Have you looked back to reflect on the day of your Confirmation? Perhaps confirmed as an adolescent or an adult but the nature of Confirmation is to seal us with the Holy Spirit and grace us the seven gifts: Wisdom, Understanding, Counsel, Fortitude, Knowledge, Piety, Fear of the Lord. With these gifts we can live and say, “Jesus is Lord” (1 Corinthians 12:3).

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ST. JOSEPH: TERROR OF DEMONS

1/5/2021

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A silent or hidden figure typically goes unnoticed. This does not mean they are insignificant individuals, but we really notice those who make themselves noticeable: a presence that we interpret as assertive, confident, and grabs our attention. This is what our society values. A blabbermouth.

So, if the feast of Saint Joseph the Worker came and left on Saturday, May 1st that should come as no surprise; St. Joseph is one of the most silent and hidden personalities of the New Testament. And with such individuals, they simply are not given much attention. And among Protestant circles the Virgin Mary is ignored for this very reason: “There’s not much said about her in the Bible.”

Do saints need to be loud-mouthed self-absorbed narcissists on glossy magazine covers so people notice them? Probably this is the case in our day and age since Likes, Views, and Trending determine what is worth watching – even if this is paid publicity.

Someone like Saint Joseph simply does not fit the mainstream of contemporary western culture where the entertainment/sex industry have consumed humans depleting whatever remains of the spiritual.

Saint Joseph has all the qualities of what our society lacks or rejects: humility, poverty, chastity, obedience, faith.

​If you spoke to someone about St. Joseph’s chastity? What kind of reaction would you get? Obviously, in a pornography consumed society a person simply cannot believe that chastity is possible. This is the beauty of St. Joseph; he was so chaste and pure that when he discovered that Mary was going to conceive a child that was not his, but the work of the Holy Spirit, Joseph could believe it. He could believe in this fundamental Christian truth because St. Joseph was already disposed spiritually being pure in heart and mind to receive such an announcement.


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Transformed by the resurrection

3/4/2021

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Some people have commented that they have not seen any blogs from me in a while. 

But I teach. And I want to give my students a solid Roman Catholic education. They are the future: we count on them to bring the Gospel message of truth and love. We are Christians: and teach others what Christ taught; and to live ourselves the message of the Gospel. There is but one Saviour: Jesus. The message has not changed.

Is this not what the Acts of the Apostles tell us in our First Reading: “You know the message…” To whom does “you” refer? The Apostles? Us? The Apostles are the witnesses and recorded what they observed, namely, the empty Tomb. And following the Apostles, our faith tells us we can believe their  testimony and teach others the same: our Saviour was risen from the dead.

Of course, this presupposes faith. If people lack faith, or if they are skeptics, or doubt, how will they come to have faith. To believe is the work of Grace; but also the effort of our intelligence.

But Christians are a people of hope; we even hope for the conversion of others to the Christian faith, to accept what God wants to give them – and us – Eternal Salvation. This is why Jesus came into the world.
​

Conversion is for sinners. Spiritual and moral transformation from sin to sanctification --possible by God’s grace -- if we are humble enough to acknowledge we need help. If we do not believe we are sinners, then, we have no need for a Saviour. We have no need for the Gospel, for this message of salvation. The Gospel of Our Lord is about being saved from sin. This is why Jesus died. Christ did not come for the righteous but sinners. Christianity is more than humanism where we are “nice” to each other; our religion is about bringing the fullness of truth to others which means to live in light and not in darkness -- Jesus is the light; and to offer the love of Jesus to others which is self-giving love takes the shape of the Cross.



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Does the Birth of Christ change our lives?

24/12/2020

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I thought for Christmas I would write something more personal. Today (December 24th) was the deadline for grade submission for my university classes. As I looked at my students’ results, I thought overall the students did quite well. But my concern was for the “C” students. “C” is a passing grade but if you want to apply for a scholarship or a graduate programme “C” is not only useless, but the grade also becomes an obstacle. Moreover, “C” lowers the GPA (Grade Point Average). Do I want to be the professor who is the cause of a lowered GPA? I do struggle with this thought. It could ruin a student’s future. A grade, a course, a transcript can affect a student for life; makes me reflect on what I have done to help the student over the course of the semester.

As part of my Advent discipline, I decided to be up by 3:45am and be at the gym by 4:15am. Discipline is always good for the mind and body. I listened to spiritual podcasts (Bishop Fulton Sheen) during the workout, so the gym turned into a retreat. In our Dominican House we have a chapel where I celebrate daily Mass and I can have daily Adoration. Between reading, marking, and praying, the day goes by rather fast. Our Dominican community has prayers and meals together 2 to 3 time/day.

During my 1-hour Adoration I was reading a prayer of reparation for all those who committed offenses against the Blessed Sacrament, against God, against His Saints. Then, I looked at myself and I began to wonder if I sinned against God by the sin of omission: What have I failed to teach? Where could have I helped someone (a student or others) and I failed to? In this state of recognising I did not do as much as I could have to keep --or lead -- my students on the path of truth, I decided it would be best to go to Confession, especially as a preparation for Christmas. I normally go to Confession once ever two weeks so in prayer I realised I should return to Confession for these sins of omission.

​I realised that God gives us many opportunities to live in grace and holiness. Our inclination is thinking we need to be “doing something” or “be somewhere else” to grow in sanctity. In fact, our sanctity, our growth is being exactly where we are; being who we are. But being who we are as God sees us and knows us. As we existed in His mind before our birth. Growing in sanctity does not mean “escape” to somewhere else but living our vocation exactly where we are and who we are. This is what the Saints had done in monasteries, convents, as spouses, as lay individuals. God gives us daily opportunities to grow in holiness; the question is, what do we do with these opportunities. It does not mean to become someone else, but to be God’s image of “me.”




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Removing the clutter

5/12/2020

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I was marking assignments on the significance of the Last Supper; one of my students focussed on the humility of Jesus. He highlighted the fact that Jesus, on his last evening with the Apostles, chose to wash their feet. This, of course, was taken from St. John’s Gospel. The students were also asked to carefully examine St. Luke. The fact this student was struck by the humility of Jesus in spite of other fundamental elements of the Last Supper made me reflect on the radical humility in the life of Our Saviour.
 
I emphasise “humility” as a fundamental quality manifesting the person of Jesus because humility extends to the last acts of His human life in continuity with the events surrounding Jesus’s birth. In the 2nd Sunday of Advent we hear Isaiah proclaiming, “Prepare the way for the Lord,” words identified with St. John the Baptist (Mark 1:3; Isaiah 40:3). But who is this John the Baptist? He is considered a prophet by his contemporaries and his disciples. He lived the radical life of an ascetic anticipating the coming of the Messiah. Detached from the world, John the Baptist prepared himself and others for Jesus: repentance, cleansing, and detachment. Repentance of sins acknowledges that one is a sinner -- we actually do have sins to be forgiven! This prepares us for Jesus, as John the Baptist had done. Forgiveness also means the mind and heart are cleansed of clutter. Interior purification leads to making daily changes. John lived off locusts and honey! An aesthetic diet for someone dwelling in the desert. John the Baptist’s life and language reflected a humble preparation for “The one who is more powerful than I is coming after me.”
 
I have always been astonished and overjoyed visiting poor countries the openness to prayer, the dependence on God, the value attached to the Sacraments. “Why, I ask myself?” Because their hands are not full with their possessions. They have room to pray, to hope, to ask, and to be thankful. With material well-being we become “cluttered” and self-sufficient. We no longer “need” God. It requires “humility” to say, “I need you.” “I need you, Lord, without you I cannot move forward.” It requires humility to say “someone is greater than I.”
 
In God’s plan to save us He showed that humility is the route of salvation. The Son of God is prepared for a stable. Divine Kingship is not shown in human terms of power, wealth, and fame to impress us with superficial “crowns.” Ugliness of pride is what separated the first man and woman from God (Genesis 3), and so it will be radical humility that will reconcile man with God. Humility is our path to salvation following Christ. 

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"A Capable woman"

14/11/2020

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​We have reached the end of Ordinary Time. The end -- end times -- preparing for who is to come reflects Sunday’s readings --- 33rd Sunday is “the end.” This year our end readings might appear rather apocalyptic: with the rising cases of Covid, with uncertainly and anxiety caused by the US elections, with rising tension experienced with radical Islam, with our society’s sexual ethics that are a return to paganism, indeed, the world is shaky, or perhaps being shaken by God.
 
Who is this “capable wife,” the woman whom Proverbs speaks of? One phrase that makes this woman truly “capable”: “but a woman who fears the Lord is to be praised.” These verses we find at the opening of Proverbs: “Fear of Yahweh is the beginning of knowledge; fools spurn wisdom and disciplines.” (Proverbs 1:7). The “capable” wife, like all believers, as the foundation of her decisions and actions, is fear of God. Everything flows from this relationship of filial love.
 
“Fear” is often thought of in terms of “threats” that cause “trembling”; but this is not the kind of fear of which Proverbs speak. The fear corresponds to God as Creator, the loving Father who creates our soul, our very being, and the one who sustains our life. And so, fear as it has been properly understood, is a filial towards God, so God is both cause and end of our actions.


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ALL SAINTS! ALL SOULS! OUR PRAYERS!

1/11/2020

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On All Saints Day the Roman Catholic Church celebrates its Saints and on All Souls Day and during the following nine days we remember and pray for our deceased family and friends.

At the Solemn Mass before us we have the Communion of Saints: we celebrate the Saints as the true heroes of our world The Saints are heroes of Christian virtue and this is why they are patrons of our Churches, reflect our windows, and drape our altars. They are martyrs, dedicated men and women, who gave their lives to Confess the Truth, and to live by the Truth of Christ. This means that the Saints, while they may have been persecuted, surrounded by errors, and the stinking rot of sin, continued to strive for holiness following the teachings of Christ and Apostolic tradition of the Church.

​Neither Christ nor His Church tolerates errors because by living the lie of sin, we refuse Eternal salvation. People who strive for holiness are aware of the challenges, the obstacles, the frustrations, but we do not give up. We believe in God’s grace. We believe in the salvific blood of our Saviour. We live in a world to which we bring the light of the Son of God, His Gospel, and the hope of Eternal life that only Christ can give us. But Christ’s message is an invitation to Christ’s divine banquet. Some accept the invitation. Some do not. Refusing the invitation of Our Lord means is to refuse His love, His Grace, fundamentally, the Truth because He is the Way the Truth and the Life.


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Our Lady of Victory/Our Lady of the Most Holy Rosary -- Ora pro nobis

6/10/2020

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​Today, October 7th, the Roman Catholic Church celebrates a great feast, in fact, a “Solemnity”! We give thanks to the Blessed Virgin Mary for interceding for Christian Europe when Ottoman Muslim fleets off the shores of Greece engaged in battle against the Catholic Alliance in 1571. The Dominican Pope, St. Pius V, secured a Catholic League of the Papal States, Venice and Spain/Austria /Italian states. The Pope and his alliance sought to put an end to Ottoman/Muslim attacks and terrorising raids on Italian territories and the Croatian coast. In fact, the Ottomans were making inroads into Christian territories in the Mediterranean stretching across Cyprus attacking as far as Malta and by land into the north, in Hungary and Poland.

Pope, Pius V asked the faithful to pray the Rosary and ask for Mary to intercede for Christian Europe as Ottoman/Muslim armies continued to expand west. The attacks had been going on since the 8th century and the naval battle of Lepanto could have very well changed the religious demography of Europe. European Catholicism could have been eradicated similar to Christianity in North Africa -- all but disappeared (with the exception of Egypt). Like Byzantine Christian capital Constantinople in the 4th century, Rome was now the coveted prize of the of Catholic Christianity.
Wars are disturbing. They are a tragic reality of history when peoples, civilisations, attempt to defend themselves from aggressors. We won’t know the power of prayer, the intercessory role of Mary, if we forget out history. We will forget that we are indebted to the martyrs who died for the Christian faith as a testimony of their faith in Christ, the testimony they leave us of truth, love and courage. 

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    Author

    Fr. David Bellusci, O.P.
    is a Roman Catholic Priest, and Assistant Professor 
    of Philosophy and Theology at Catholic Pacific College in Langley, B.C.

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  • Home
    • About Father Bellusci
    • Contact
  • TALKS
    • Upcoming Events
    • Past Events
  • ARTICLES
    • Homilies
    • Blogs
    • Catholic Pilgrim >
      • Photos
    • Book Reviews
  • FRASSATI
    • Reflections
  • Books
    • Pier Giorgio Frassati Truth, Love and Sacrifice
    • Age of Innocence
    • Roman Incense
    • Love Deformed, Love Transformed
    • Ontology Of Blue
    • Amor Dei in the Sixteenth and Seventeenth Centuries
    • Beating The Drums
    • Readers Review >
      • Age of Innocence
  • Sexuality
    • Humanae Vitae
    • Theology of the Body >
      • Introduction
      • Lessons 1-9
    • GENDER IDEOLOGY
  • Guest Bloggers
    • Andrzej Skulski
    • Br. Gavin Rodrigues, O.P.
    • Lara Paniagua