Enjoy this brief meditation on the relevance of Ash Wednesday and a prayer of self-love!
logo-tag

February 14, 2024

Hello John,

Blessed Lent! As we embark on the sacred journey, I invite you to start this season with a powerful act of generosity through Franciscan Media’s "Invest in Inspiration" matching gift week. Right now, every contribution you make, up to $20,000, will be matched, doubling its impact. 

This initiative is a profound way to make a tangible difference in the lives of those who turn to Franciscan Media for faith-filled resources, guidance, and inspiration.

Maximize your impact (2)-1

Your support allows the spread of the light of hope and spirituality far and wide. Seize this moment to ignite a spark of transformation. Your donation today will resonate beyond measure, shaping the Lenten journey for countless individuals seeking solace, wisdom, and renewal.  

 

Join me now in this beautiful expression of faith and compassion. To double your impact today, click below to make your donation.

Donate Now!

Blessed Lent, 

Christopher_Meyer

Christopher Meyer
Director of Development 

cmeyer-1
SAINT OF THE DAY
bible-planks-2.14

Saint of the Day for February 14: Saints Cyril and Methodius

(Cyril: c. 827 – February 14, 869 | Methodius: c. 815 – April 6, 884)

Because their father was an officer in a part of Greece inhabited by many Slavs, these two Greek brothers ultimately became missionaries, teachers, and patrons of the Slavic peoples.

 

After a brilliant course of studies, Cyril (called Constantine until he became a monk shortly before his death) refused the governorship of a district such as his brother had accepted among the Slavic-speaking population. Cyril withdrew to a monastery where his brother Methodius had become a monk after some years in a governmental post.

 

A decisive change in their lives occurred when the Duke of Moravia asked the Eastern Emperor Michael for political independence from German rule and ecclesiastical autonomy (having their own clergy and liturgy). Cyril and Methodius undertook the missionary task.

 

Cyril’s first work was to invent an alphabet, still used in some Eastern liturgies. His followers probably formed the Cyrillic alphabet. Together they translated the Gospels, the psalter, Paul’s letters and the liturgical books into Slavonic, and composed a Slavonic liturgy, highly irregular then.

 

That and their free use of the vernacular in preaching led to opposition from the German clergy. The bishop refused to consecrate Slavic bishops and priests, and Cyril was forced to appeal to Rome. On the visit to Rome, he and Methodius had the joy of seeing their new liturgy approved by Pope Adrian II. Cyril, long an invalid, died in Rome 50 days after taking the monastic habit.

 

Methodius continued mission work for 16 more years. He was papal legate for all the Slavic peoples, consecrated a bishop and then given an ancient see (now in the Czech Republic). When much of their former territory was removed from their jurisdiction, the Bavarian bishops retaliated with a violent storm of accusation against Methodius. As a result, Emperor Louis the German exiled Methodius for three years. Pope John VIII secured his release.

 

Because the Frankish clergy, still smarting, continued their accusations, Methodius had to go to Rome to defend himself against charges of heresy and uphold his use of the Slavonic liturgy. He was again vindicated.

 

Legend has it that in a feverish period of activity, Methodius translated the whole Bible into Slavonic in eight months. He died on Tuesday of Holy Week, surrounded by his disciples, in his cathedral church.

 

Opposition continued after his death, and the work of the brothers in Moravia was brought to an end and their disciples scattered. But the expulsions had the beneficial effect of spreading the spiritual, liturgical, and cultural work of the brothers to Bulgaria, Bohemia and southern Poland. Patrons of Moravia, and specially venerated by Catholic Czechs, Slovaks, Croatians, Orthodox Serbians and Bulgarians, Cyril and Methodius are eminently fitted to guard the long-desired unity of East and West. In 1980, Pope John Paul II named them additional co-patrons of Europe.

 

Reflection

Holiness means reacting to human life with God’s love: human life as it is, crisscrossed with the political and the cultural, the beautiful and the ugly, the selfish and the saintly. For Cyril and Methodius much of their daily cross had to do with the language of the liturgy. They are not saints because they got the liturgy into Slavonic, but because they did so with the courage and humility of Christ.

 

Saints Cyril and Methodius are the patron saints of:

Slavic Peoples
Ecumenism

Today is Ash Wednesday!

You can still sign up to receive daily inspiration during this season of repentance, forgiveness, and hope. Connect and pray with the Church’s most beloved saints and holy people, including Thomas Merton, Francis, Clare, Damien of Molokai, Teresa of Calcutta, and Gianna Molla and more!

Register today for this exclusive experience!

Lent with the Saints
MINUTE MEDITATIONS
dance

The Divine Dance of Lent

Prayer as a spiritual practice never goes out of style. Not only on Ash Wednesday but throughout the entire year, prayer is a powerful way of participating in divine community. By lifting our own broken pieces and those of others in prayer, we attest to—rather than run from—the vulnerable parts of our lives. Prayer connects us with each other and with God. This sacred unity connects our individual broken pieces with those of others, creating a beautiful new kind of wholeness.

 

God is ready to heal our woundedness, to make us more whole than ever before. Lent is our call to make room for the divine dance to work its sacred magic within us.

 

—from St. Anthony Messenger‘s “Dust to Dust: An Ash Wednesday Reflection“ by Mary Ann Steutermann

Let Saint Marianne Cope be your Guide through Lent!

These exclusive compact booklets in packs of 10 are perfect for gifting to friends, family, and your parish!

Click here to learn more!
9781632534774
PAUSE+PRAY
selflove

I Love Myself

Reflect

When we think of love, often the focus is on the love that is projected outward—to a partner, a child, a friend. But when do we stop and focus on ourselves? As children of God, we should show ourselves as much love as we do for others. Only by building up and loving ourselves, will we be able to be a reflection of God’s love.

 

Pray

Lord,
Help me to see myself
in the same way that you do.
May I remember that in your eyes
I am perfectly and wonderfully made
and should show myself the same
love that I offer to others.

 

Act

Do you something kind for yourself today. You deserve it.

 

Today's Pause+Pray was written by Susan Hines-Brigger. Learn more here!

This newsletter is not free to produce! Please consider making a donation to help us in our efforts to share God's love in the spirit of Saint Francis.

Please donate today!

Donate   |   Shop   |   About   |   St. Anthony Messenger Magazine

Franciscan Spirit   |   Saint of the Day   |   Minute Meditations   |   Pause and Pray

Facebook
X
Instagram
Pinterest

Franciscan Media, 28 W. Liberty St., Cincinnati, OH 45202, USA

Unsubscribe Manage preferences