A Christmas Litany of Mercy

This little Christmas litany is one I had forgotten I’d written and was glad to find.

May we praise you, Christ Child, and welcome you into our world, and into our hearts. May we grow in gratitude and intimacy with you, as we live within your light. May we begin the renewal of our relationship with you in a prayer of recognition:

(Our Father…)
Lord, have mercy…
Christ, have mercy…
Lord, have mercy…

Incarnate Word, Have Mercy on us, and on the whole world
Logos and Icon of the Father, Have Mercy on us, and on the whole world
All-Light, Have Mercy on us, and on the whole world
Son of Mary, Have Mercy on us, and on the whole world
Charge of Joseph, Kind and Strong, Have Mercy on us, and on the whole world
Manger-lain Child, Have Mercy on us, and on the whole world
Bread of Angels, Have Mercy on us, and on the whole world
Food for the World, Have Mercy on us, and on the whole world
Light of the Nations, Have Mercy on us, and on the whole world
Divine Spouse, Have Mercy on us, and on the whole world
Balm of Gilead, Have Mercy on us, and on the whole world
Wonderful Counselor, Have Mercy on us, and on the whole world
Font of Mercy, Have Mercy on us, and on the whole world
Face of Justice, Have Mercy on us, and on the whole world
Our Salvation, Have Mercy on us, and on the whole world
Luminous Mystery, Have Mercy on us, and on the whole world
Bright Promise Kept, Have Mercy on us, and on the whole world
God-With-Us, Have Mercy on us, and on the whole world

Let us pray: Christ Jesus, in your littleness, teach us how to be humble before others. In your vulnerability, teach us to trust that all of God’s purposes redound to our good. In your gifting generosity, teach us how to freely give of ourselves to others. In your Light, teach us how to reflect you, in your mercy and justice, to the rest of the world. With all of your holy men and women, and with the angels and saints, we stand before your improbable throne – the food bin from which you will feed the world – and ask this in your name. Amen.

Last Minute Book Ideas for Christmas!

If you still need a few gifts, I have some books to suggest, especially since I have been very remiss this year in reviewing and recommending titles. Sorry, it has been a strange and busy year. I never did get those podcasts going, as I’d planned, either.

Books make such fantastic gifts (and they’re easy to gift wrap according to websites like Burning Book Press!) There really is a book for everyone and that’s why they’re so fantastic! Plus, I actually managed to get all the books that I have purchased this year at a brilliant price thanks to some promo codes that I found online. You see, I purchase a lot of my books from Target so when my friend told me that there was a discount code that I could use to secure a discount I simply could not resist! Accordingly, you can check out the latest Target coupons and promo codes here: https://www.raise.com/coupons/target.

To be honest, as much as I love Christmas, it can be a very expensive time of year. Anyway, I actually did a lot of my Christmas shopping on the Target website this year so I would definitely recommend taking a look to see what you can find if you are in need of any last-minute gifts!

So, here’s to getting 2019 off to a brilliant start!

In the meantime, here are some terrific books you might consider picking up, especially if you need some last-minute gift ideas:

There is nobody, but nobody, who puts fine art into historical context like Elizabeth Lev.

In 2010 I had the opportunity to tour the Vatican Museums under escort of Elizabeth Lev and she brought us the history of Christian art — tying in everything from the first engravings of Jonah and the Whale to the design of St. Peter’s basilica — in a way that was staggering, flabbergasting and beyond anything I could have imagined. That tour remains a highlight of all of my travels.

Her just-released book examining how Catholic art of the counter-reformation essentially saved the faith is gorgeously put-together, featuring full-color reproductions you just want to stare at all day, put into historical context and minutely examined and explained as only Lev can do it. How Catholic Art Saved the Faith is an elegant and meditative gift for any art lover or student of the Church. Once you hold this in your hand you will very likely wish you’d ordered a copy for yourself. So you may as well!

Every bit as good as its precursor.

Brant Pitre knocked me out a few years ago when he wrote Jesus and the Jewish Roots of the Eucharist

— a book which I ended up buying over a dozen copies of and giving to priests (who absolutely loved it as well) — and Jesus and the Jewish Roots of Mary is equally as compelling and instructive.

I’ve only just begun reading Mind, Heart, & Soul:Intellectuals and the Path to Rome, but I have enjoyed what I’ve read. R.J. Snell and Robbie George interviewed sixteen converts to the faith — writers, professors, priests and journalists among them — about what led them to Catholicism and what keeps them there.

The book was complied before this past summer’s new storms, so there is no discussion of former Cardinal Theodore McCarrick, or what steps must be taken on the question of the accountability of our bishops. Rather, what is here is meant to help reinforce a reader’s faith and bring a new perspective, as with this thought, expressed by Harvard Law professor Adrian Vermeule who says the Church, at its depths, is not disturbed by the roiling waters of her own trying times and scandals: “The Church seems to me an institution whose foundations are as strong as iron. The turmoil will pass away; episodes, scandals and debates will come and go; but the line and witness of Peter’s successors will never fail.”

Convert stories have a way of helping us re-appreciate the faith when it feels too familiar or as though it is in some ways failing.

We gave this to our pastor in hopes that he’ll invite the whole parish to participate in learning to love the Mass.

Finally, this is not a “book” per se. The Mass is a video class taught by Bishop Robert Barron in which he explains the Mass, from the first moments of our gathering — even before the celebrant has processed into the Church — until our dismissal. This is, literally, the catechesis of the Mass that we have needed since the institution of the Novus Ordo. Barron is, as ever, accessible, humorous, but also deeply instructive and inspiring, and it was my honor to write the study guide for this presentation.

I’m recommending that you pick this up as a “family gift”, for your whole household to use together — watch a segment, work the study guide together, and if you like it, suggest creating a study group in your parish. Respondents have said this series has changed their outlook from “Sigh, we have to go to Mass,” to “Yes, we get to go to Mass!”

Any of the books I recommended recently for Advent reading can work as gifts, too, except (of course) the Advent daily prayer guides. As ever, when you purchase anything through these Amazon links, you help support this blog, which keeps me from taking on ads, so I thank you!